Disease burden, risk factors, and temporal trends of eye cancer: A global analysis of cancer registries

Background This study aims to investigate the global disease burden, risk factors, and temporal trends of eye cancer by sex and age group. Methods Databases including Cancer Incidence in Five Continents volumes I–XI, the Nordic Cancer Registries, the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Progr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical & experimental ophthalmology 2024-05, Vol.52 (4), p.440-451
Hauptverfasser: Huang, Junjie, Chan, Sze Chai, Ko, Samantha, Lok, Veeleah, Zhang, Lin, Lin, Xu, Lucero‐Prisno, Don Eliseo, Xu, Wanghong, Zheng, Zhi‐Jie, Elcarte, Edmar, Withers, Mellissa, Wong, Martin C. S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background This study aims to investigate the global disease burden, risk factors, and temporal trends of eye cancer by sex and age group. Methods Databases including Cancer Incidence in Five Continents volumes I–XI, the Nordic Cancer Registries, the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program and the WHO IARC mortality database were accessed to extract incidence and mortality data. Joinpoint regression analyses were conducted to evaluate the Average Annual Percentage Change of the incidence and mortality. Results The age‐standardised rates of eye cancer incidence and mortality were 0.49 and 0.08 globally in 2020. Higher incidence rates were observed in Sub‐Saharan Africa (ASR = 4.06), Western Europe (ASR = 0.89), and Northern Europe (ASR = 0.84), but higher mortality was observed only in Sub‐Saharan Africa (ASR = 1.59). Lower HDI, higher prevalence of UV exposure and lower prevalence of several lifestyle habits and metabolic syndromes were associated with higher incidence and mortality. There was an overall stable incidence trend and a decreasing mortality trend. Notably, all countries reporting decreasing trend in mortality were in the Asian or European region. Conclusions Although higher incidence was observed in both African and European regions, only the Sub‐Saharan Africa region reported high mortality, indicating inequity in the access of healthcare and treatment resource. Higher prevalence of UV exposure was associated with both higher incidence and mortality. Education should be provided to increase the awareness of eye protection. An overall declining mortality trend was found, but it was limited to only Asian and European countries.
ISSN:1442-6404
1442-9071
DOI:10.1111/ceo.14353