Department of Oncology, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, 3330 Hospital Drive NW, Calgary, AB, Canada.
Centre for Population Health Data, Statistics Canada, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Sci Rep. 2024 Mar 7;14(1):5688. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-56150-x.
In Canada, the absolute number of cancer deaths has been steadily increasing, however, age-standardized cancer mortality rates peaked decades ago for most cancers. The objective of this study was to estimate the reduction in deaths for each cancer type under the scenario where peak mortality rates had remained stable in Canada. Data for this study were obtained the Global Cancer Observatory and Statistics Canada. We estimated age-standardized mortality rates (ASMR, per 100,000) from 1950 to 2022, standardized to the 2011 Canadian standard population. We identified peak mortality rates and applied the age-specific mortality rates from the peak year to the age-specific Canadian population estimates for subsequent years (up to 2022) to estimate the number of expected deaths. Avoided cancer deaths were the difference between the observed and expected number of cancer deaths. There have been major reductions in deaths among cancers related to tobacco consumption and other modifiable lifestyle habits (417,561 stomach; 218,244 colorectal; 186,553 lung; 66,281 cervix; 32,732 head and neck; 27,713 bladder; 22,464 leukemia; 20,428 pancreas; 8863 kidney; 3876 esophagus; 290 liver). There have been 201,979 deaths avoided for female-specific cancers (breast, cervix, ovary, uterus). Overall, there has been a 34% reduction in mortality for lung cancer among males and a 9% reduction among females. There has been a significant reduction in cancer mortality in Canada since site-specific cancer mortality rates peaked decades ago for many cancers. This shows the exceptional progress made in cancer control in Canada due to substantial improvements in prevention, screening, and treatment. This study highlights priority areas where more attention and investment are needed to achieve progress.
在加拿大,癌症死亡人数一直在稳步增加,但大多数癌症的年龄标准化死亡率在几十年前就达到了峰值。本研究的目的是在加拿大死亡率峰值保持稳定的情况下,估计每种癌症类型的死亡人数减少情况。本研究的数据来自全球癌症观察站和加拿大统计局。我们根据 1950 年至 2022 年的数据估计了年龄标准化死亡率(ASMR,每 10 万人),并根据 2011 年加拿大标准人口进行了标准化。我们确定了死亡率峰值,并将从峰值年份到随后年份(截止到 2022 年)的加拿大特定年龄人口估计值应用于特定年龄的死亡率,以估计预期死亡人数。避免的癌症死亡人数是观察到的癌症死亡人数与预期癌症死亡人数之间的差异。与吸烟和其他可改变的生活方式习惯有关的癌症的死亡人数已经大幅减少(417561 例胃癌;218244 例结直肠癌;186553 例肺癌;66281 例宫颈癌;32732 例头颈部癌;27713 例膀胱癌;22464 例白血病;20428 例胰腺癌;8863 例肾癌;3876 例食管癌;290 例肝癌)。女性特定癌症(乳腺癌、宫颈癌、卵巢癌、子宫癌)避免了 201979 例死亡。总体而言,男性肺癌死亡率下降了 34%,女性下降了 9%。自几十年前许多癌症的特定部位癌症死亡率达到峰值以来,加拿大的癌症死亡率已经显著下降。这表明,由于预防、筛查和治疗方面的大幅改善,加拿大在癌症控制方面取得了非凡的进展。本研究突出了需要更多关注和投资的优先领域,以取得进展。