Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of São Paulo, Av. Dr. Arnaldo 715, Pacaembu, Sao Paulo, SP, CEP: 01246-904, Brazil.
International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), WHO, Lyon, France.
BMC Cancer. 2019 Oct 11;19(1):940. doi: 10.1186/s12885-019-6184-1.
In Brazil, 211 thousand (16.14%) of all death certificates in 2016 identified cancer as the underlying cause of death, and it is expected that around 320 thousand will receive a cancer diagnosis in 2019. We aimed to describe trends of cancer mortality from 1996 to 2016, in 133 intermediate regions of Brazil, and to discuss macro-regional differences of trends by human development and healthcare provision.
This ecological study assessed georeferenced official data on population and mortality, health spending, and healthcare provision from Brazilian governmental agencies. The regional office of the United Nations Development Program provided data on the Human Development Index in Brazil. Deaths by misclassified or unspecified causes (garbage codes) were redistributed proportionally to known causes. Age-standardized mortality rates used the world population as reference. Prais-Winsten autoregression allowed calculating trends for each region, sex and cancer type.
Trends were predominantly on the increase in the North and Northeast, whereas they were mainly decreasing or stationary in the South, Southeast, and Center-West. Also, the variation of trends within intermediate regions was more pronounced in the North and Northeast. Intermediate regions with higher human development, government health spending, and hospital beds had more favorable trends for all cancers and many specific cancer types.
Patterns of cancer trends in the country reflect differences in human development and the provision of health resources across the regions. Increasing trends of cancer mortality in low-income Brazilian regions can overburden their already fragile health infrastructure. Improving the healthcare provision and reducing socioeconomic disparities can prevent increasing trends of mortality by all cancers and specific cancer types in Brazilian more impoverished regions.
2016 年,巴西所有死亡证明中有 21.1 万份(16.14%)将癌症列为根本死因,预计 2019 年将有 3.2 万人被诊断出患有癌症。我们旨在描述 1996 年至 2016 年巴西 133 个中等地区的癌症死亡率趋势,并讨论人类发展和医疗保健提供情况的宏观区域差异。
本生态研究评估了来自巴西政府机构的人口和死亡率、卫生支出以及医疗保健提供情况的地理参考官方数据。联合国开发计划署区域办事处提供了巴西人类发展指数的数据。将因归类错误或未指定原因(垃圾代码)而死亡的人数按已知原因的比例重新分配。年龄标准化死亡率使用世界人口作为参考。普赖斯-温斯坦自回归允许为每个地区、性别和癌症类型计算趋势。
北部和东北部的趋势主要呈上升趋势,而南部、东南部和中西部的趋势主要呈下降或稳定趋势。此外,北部和东北部的中间区域内的趋势变化更为明显。人类发展水平较高、政府卫生支出较高和病床较多的中间区域,所有癌症和许多特定癌症类型的趋势更为有利。
该国癌症趋势的模式反映了各地区人类发展和卫生资源提供情况的差异。巴西低收入地区癌症死亡率上升的趋势可能会使本已脆弱的卫生基础设施不堪重负。改善医疗保健提供并减少社会经济差距,可以防止巴西较贫困地区所有癌症和特定癌症类型的死亡率上升趋势。