Adult Cancer Program, Prince of Wales Clinical School, University of New South Wales, Australia.
Adult Cancer Program, Prince of Wales Clinical School, University of New South Wales, Australia.
Cancer Epidemiol. 2014 Aug;38(4):460-4. doi: 10.1016/j.canep.2014.05.004. Epub 2014 Jun 11.
Cancer of unknown primary (CUP) is a common cancer yet little is known about the reliability of incidence data.
We audited 574 CUP (C80.9) diagnoses (median age 81 years) registered by the New South Wales (NSW) Central Cancer Registry (2004-2007) in a cohort of Australian Government Department of Veterans' Affairs clients. The registry did not clarify diagnoses with notifiers during this period due to interpretation of privacy legislation. For the audit, current registry practice was applied by seeking additional information from CUP notifiers and reclassifying diagnoses as necessary. In addition, clinicopathological characteristics were extracted from notifications. Fisher's exact test and Student's t-test were used to compare the demographic and clinicopathological characteristics of the CUP subgroups. Age/sex-standardised CUP incidence rates and 95% confidence intervals were calculated, standardised to the 2001 Australian population.
172 (30.0%) cases were reclassified to a known primary site, mostly cutaneous, and nine (1.6%) were found to be non-malignant diagnoses. After the audit the age/sex-standardised CUP incidence rates decreased from 26.0 (95% CI 21.2-30.8) to 15.9 (95% CI 12.5-19.3) per 100,000 person-years. Of the 393 remaining CUP cases, 202 (51%) were registered on the basis of a clinical diagnosis (46 by death certificate only) and 191 (49%) by pathological diagnosis (79 by cytology alone). Compared to cases with a pathological diagnosis, cases with a clinical diagnosis were older (85.6 vs. 82.0 years, p<0.001), and the reported number and location of metastases differed (p<0.001); metastatic sites were more likely to be unspecified for clinical diagnoses (36.1% vs. 4.2%).
Cancer registry processes can markedly influence CUP incidence. Future population-based CUP research should take this into account, and consider stratification by basis of diagnosis due to differences in patient and tumour characteristics.
癌症未知原发灶(CUP)是一种常见的癌症,但对于其发病率数据的可靠性知之甚少。
我们审计了新南威尔士州(NSW)中央癌症登记处(2004-2007 年)登记的 574 例癌症未知原发灶(C80.9)诊断病例(中位年龄 81 岁),这些病例是澳大利亚政府退伍军人事务部患者队列中的一部分。在这段时间内,由于对隐私法规的解释,登记处没有向通报者澄清诊断。对于审计,我们应用当前的登记处实践,向 CUP 通报者寻求额外信息,并根据需要重新分类诊断。此外,还从通知中提取了临床病理特征。使用 Fisher 确切检验和 Student t 检验比较 CUP 亚组的人口统计学和临床病理特征。计算了年龄/性别标准化的 CUP 发病率和 95%置信区间,并按 2001 年澳大利亚人口进行标准化。
172 例(30.0%)病例被重新分类到已知的原发部位,主要是皮肤,9 例(1.6%)被发现为非恶性诊断。审计后,年龄/性别标准化的 CUP 发病率从 26.0(95%CI 21.2-30.8)降至 15.9(95%CI 12.5-19.3)/100,000 人年。在剩余的 393 例 CUP 病例中,202 例(51%)基于临床诊断登记(46 例仅通过死亡证明登记),191 例(49%)基于病理诊断(79 例仅通过细胞学诊断)。与病理诊断病例相比,临床诊断病例年龄更大(85.6 岁比 82.0 岁,p<0.001),报告的转移部位和数量不同(p<0.001);临床诊断病例更有可能未指明转移部位(36.1%比 4.2%)。
癌症登记处的流程会显著影响 CUP 的发病率。未来基于人群的 CUP 研究应考虑到这一点,并考虑由于患者和肿瘤特征的差异,按诊断依据进行分层。