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      Socioeconomic Inequalities in Cancer Incidence in Europe: A Comprehensive Review of Population-based Epidemiological Studies

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          Abstract

          Background

          Since the end of the previous century, there has not been a comprehensive review of European studies on socioeconomic inequality in cancer incidence. In view of recent advances in data source linkage and analytical methods, we aimed to update the knowledge base on associations between location-specific cancer incidence and individual or area-level measures of socio-economic status (SES) among European adults.

          Materials and methods

          We systematically searched three databases ( PubMed, Scopus and Web of Science) for articles on cancer incidence and SES. Qualitative synthesis was performed on the 91 included English language studies, published between 2000 and 2019 in Europe, which focused on adults, relied on cancer registry data and reported on relative risk (RR) estimates.

          Results

          Adults with low SES have increased risk of head and neck, oesophagogastric, liver and gallbladder, pancreatic, lung, kidney, bladder, penile and cervical cancers (highest RRs for lung, head and neck, stomach and cervix). Conversely, high SES is linked with increased risk of thyroid, breast, prostate and skin cancers. Central nervous system and haematological cancers are not associated with SES. The positive gap in testicular cancer has narrowed, while colorectal cancer shows a varying pattern in different countries. Negative associations are generally stronger for men compared to women.

          Conclusions

          In Europe, cancers in almost all common locations are associated with SES and the inequalities can be explained to a varying degree by known life-style related factors, most notably smoking. Independent effects of many individual and area SES measures which capture different aspects of SES can also be observed.

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          Most cited references120

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          Recent Global Patterns in Prostate Cancer Incidence and Mortality Rates

          Previous studies have reported significant variation in prostate cancer rates and trends mainly due to differences in detection practices, availability of treatment, and underlying genetic susceptibility.
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            Incidence of haematological malignancy by sub-type: a report from the Haematological Malignancy Research Network

            Background: Ascertainment of cases and disease classification is an acknowledged problem for epidemiological research into haematological malignancies. Methods: The Haematological Malignancy Research Network comprises an ongoing population-based patient cohort. All diagnoses (paediatric and adult) across two UK Cancer Networks (population 3.6 million, >2000 diagnoses annually, socio-demographically representative of the UK) are made by an integrated haematopathology laboratory. Diagnostics, prognostics, and treatment are recorded to clinical trial standards, and socio-demographic measures are routinely obtained. Results: A total of 10 729 haematological malignancies (myeloid=2706, lymphoid=8023) were diagnosed over the 5 years, that is, from 2004 to 2009. Descriptive data (age, sex, and deprivation), sex-specific age-standardised (European population) rates, and estimated UK frequencies are presented for 24 sub-types. The age of patients ranged from 4 weeks to 99 years (median 70.6 years), and the male rate was more than double the female rate for several myeloid and lymphoid sub-types, this difference being evident in both children and adults. No relationship with deprivation was detected. Conclusion: Accurate population-based data on haematological malignancies can be collected to the standard required to deliver reproducible results that can be extrapolated to national populations. Our analyses emphasise the importance of gender and age as disease determinants, and suggest that aetiological investigations that focus on socio-economic factors are unlikely to be rewarding.
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              Risk factors for pancreatic cancer: a summary review of meta-analytical studies.

              The aetiology of pancreatic cancer (PC) has been extensively studied and is the subject of numerous meta-analyses and pooled analyses. We have summarized results from these pooled and meta-analytical studies to estimate the fraction of PCs attributable to each of the identified risk factors.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Radiol Oncol
                Radiol Oncol
                raon
                raon
                Radiology and Oncology
                Sciendo
                1318-2099
                1581-3207
                March 2020
                19 February 2020
                : 54
                : 1
                : 1-13
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Epidemiology and Cancer Registry, Institute of Oncology , Ljubljana, Slovenia
                Author notes
                [* ] Assoc. Prof. Vesna Zadnik, M.D., Ph.D., Epidemiology and Cancer Registry, Institute of Oncology Ljubljana, Zaloška cesta 5, SI-1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia vzadnik@ 123456onko-i.si
                Article
                raon-2020-0008
                10.2478/raon-2020-0008
                7087422
                32074075
                7e7c1114-a253-43bf-bfe4-cb57a9c38d14
                © 2020 Ana Mihor, Sonja Tomsic, Tina Zagar, Katarina Lokar, Vesna Zadnik, published by sciendo

                This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.

                History
                : 21 January 2020
                : 05 February 2020
                Page count
                Pages: 13
                Categories
                Review

                Oncology & Radiotherapy
                socioeconomic status,socioeconomic inequality,cancer incidence,adults,europe,cancer registry,relative risk

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