Critical reviews in oncology/hematology
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Crit. Rev. Oncol. Hematol. · Aug 2000
Prostate cancer incidence and mortality trends among elderly and adult Europeans.
Prostate cancer is a common malignancy primarily of elderly men, with incidence rates rapidly increasing, owing to the population ageing and the introduction of more sensitive diagnostic procedures. Although the effectiveness of a screening test remains controversial, the decreasing mortality rates, which recently emerged in the USA, may be partly attributable to the changes of patterns of care, thus suggesting a potential effect of preventive measure. The object of this study is to examine time trends in incidence and mortality from prostate cancer in European Union (EU) countries, with particular attention to possible differences between the elderly (65 years old or over) and younger or middle age adults (35-64 years old). ⋯ With reference to mortality, the MD% showed a tendency to rise, with increasing age, while no consistent pattern emerged for incidence. The observed incidence trends are probably a consequence of the different times in which the more recent detection methods were introduced in each country, and of the different policies adopted by each health care system towards the elderly. A comparison with the USA data suggests that in the next future a favourable downward mortality trend could be expected also in some EU Countries and, particularly, for younger age groups, even though prostatic cancer in old patients will remain a great burden, which National Health Care Systems will have to face in the next decades.