Evolving epidemiological patterns of thyroid cancer and estimates of overdiagnosis in 2013–17 in 63 countries worldwide: a population-based study

IF 44 1区 医学 Q1 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology Pub Date : 2024-10-07 DOI:10.1016/s2213-8587(24)00223-7
Mengmeng Li, Luigino Dal Maso, Margherita Pizzato, Salvatore Vaccarella
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Abstract

Background

The incidence of thyroid cancer has been increasing in many countries, mainly due to overdiagnosis. Given these rapid changes, we aim to assess the specific features of the thyroid cancer diagnosis epidemic and provide estimates of overdiagnosis across countries spanning five continents and identify areas in which coping strategies are needed.

Methods

Two types of data were retrieved from the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) Global Cancer Observatory database. The long-term annual incidence of thyroid cancer by sex and 5-year age group for all ages from 1980 to 2017 was obtained from continuous population-based registries available in the Cancer Incidence in Five Continents (CI5) plus, with 97 registries from 43 countries selected. Sex-age-specific thyroid cancer cases, overall and by subtype, along with corresponding population counts were retrieved from all registries included in the latest volume of CI5 (CI5-XII), with 385 registries in 63 countries. Annual mortality data from 1980 to 2022 were obtained from WHO, with population counts supplemented by UN population estimates. We estimated age-standardised rates (ASRs) of thyroid cancer incidence and mortality for all ages by sex using direct age standardisation, with the world population as a reference. Long-term annual trends of ASRs were compared between incidence and mortality since 1980. Subtype distribution was calculated for thyroid cancer incidence during 2013–17. We estimated the numbers of thyroid cancer cases and overdiagnosed cases and extrapolated to the whole country using a previously developed and validated method.

Findings

Thyroid cancer incidence rates rose during 1980–2017 for most countries, with the highest rates seen in South Korea, Cyprus, Ecuador, China, and Türkiye for females and males. An upward trend was seen until the early 2010s, followed by a downward trend in South Korea, the USA, Canada, and Israel and some Western European countries, such as France, Italy, Austria, and Ireland. The difference between the highest and lowest incidence rates ranged from less than 10·0 per 100 000 females in the early 1980s to 101·4 per 100 000 females in 2012. For males, the difference between the highest and lowest incidence rates ranged from 2·7 per 100 000 to 23·5 per 100 000 over the study period. Mortality rates were substantially lower, with a difference between the highest and lowest rates across countries of around 1·0–2·0 per 100 000 for both sexes throughout the study period. During 2013–17, papillary thyroid cancer contributed to the large variation in ASRs of thyroid cancer incidence. The mortality rates of thyroid cancer increased with age for all countries, whereas the observed age-specific incidence rates showed an inverted U-shape in most countries. The magnitude of overdiagnosis varied across countries, ranging from no overdiagnosis (in Uganda, Zimbabwe, and Trinidad and Tobago) to more than 85·0% of thyroid cancer cases being overdiagnosed in females (in Cyprus, China, South Korea, and Türkiye). Overall, 1 736 133 (75·6%) of 2 297 057 cases were attributable to overdiagnosis, including 1 368 181 females and 367 952 males.

Interpretation

Although the incidence of thyroid cancer has reached a plateau or decrease in some high-income countries, the magnitude of overdiagnosis is still very large and the expansion of overdiagnosis of thyroid cancer to the transitioning countries has been rapid, which makes it a global public health challenge that needs to be addressed.

Funding

National Natural Science Foundation of China, Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation, Young Talents Program of Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center, Italian Association for Cancer Research, and the Italian Ministry of Health (Ricerca Corrente).
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2013-17年全球63个国家甲状腺癌流行病学模式的演变和过度诊断的估计:一项基于人群的研究
背景在许多国家,甲状腺癌的发病率一直在上升,这主要是由于过度诊断造成的。鉴于这些快速变化,我们旨在评估甲状腺癌诊断流行病的具体特征,提供横跨五大洲各国的过度诊断估计数,并确定需要采取应对策略的领域。1980年至2017年按性别和5岁年龄组分列的各年龄段甲状腺癌长期年发病率是从五大洲癌症发病率(CI5)加载的连续人口登记中获得的,共选取了43个国家的97个登记。按性别年龄划分的甲状腺癌病例(包括总体病例和亚型病例)以及相应的人口数量是从 CI5 最新一卷(CI5-XII)中收录的所有登记处(共有 63 个国家的 385 个登记处)中获取的。我们从世界卫生组织获得了 1980 年至 2022 年的年度死亡率数据,并根据联合国的人口估计数补充了人口数量。我们以世界人口为参考,采用直接年龄标准化方法估算了各年龄段的甲状腺癌发病率和死亡率的年龄标准化率(ASR)。比较了自1980年以来发病率和死亡率的长期年度趋势。计算了2013-17年间甲状腺癌发病率的亚型分布。我们估算了甲状腺癌病例和过度诊断病例的数量,并使用之前开发和验证的方法推断出全国的甲状腺癌病例和过度诊断病例的数量。研究结果1980-2017年间,大多数国家的甲状腺癌发病率都有所上升,其中韩国、塞浦路斯、厄瓜多尔、中国和土耳其的女性和男性甲状腺癌发病率最高。直到2010年代初,发病率一直呈上升趋势,随后韩国、美国、加拿大和以色列以及法国、意大利、奥地利和爱尔兰等一些西欧国家的发病率呈下降趋势。最高发病率与最低发病率之间的差异从20世纪80年代初的每10万名女性中不到10-0人到2012年的每10万名女性中101-4人不等。在研究期间,男性最高发病率与最低发病率之间的差异从每十万人中 2-7 例到每十万人中 23-5 例不等。死亡率则要低得多,在整个研究期间,各国最高死亡率和最低死亡率之间的差异约为每十万人中有1-0-2-0人死亡。在2013-17年期间,甲状腺癌发病率ASR的巨大差异是由甲状腺乳头状癌造成的。在所有国家,甲状腺癌的死亡率随着年龄的增长而增加,而在大多数国家,观察到的特定年龄发病率呈倒U型。各国过度诊断的程度各不相同,从没有过度诊断(乌干达、津巴布韦、特立尼达和多巴哥)到超过85%-0%的女性甲状腺癌病例被过度诊断(塞浦路斯、中国、韩国和土耳其)不等。尽管在一些高收入国家,甲状腺癌的发病率已趋于稳定或有所下降,但过度诊断的规模仍然很大,而且甲状腺癌的过度诊断正迅速向转型国家扩展,这已成为一个亟待解决的全球性公共卫生挑战。基金项目国家自然科学基金、广东省基础与应用基础研究基金、中山大学肿瘤防治中心青年英才计划、意大利癌症研究协会、意大利卫生部(Ricerca Corrente)。
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来源期刊
The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology
The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM-
CiteScore
61.50
自引率
1.60%
发文量
371
期刊介绍: The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology, an independent journal with a global perspective and strong clinical focus, features original clinical research, expert reviews, news, and opinion pieces in each monthly issue. Covering topics like diabetes, obesity, nutrition, and more, the journal provides insights into clinical advances and practice-changing research worldwide. It welcomes original research advocating change or shedding light on clinical practice, as well as informative reviews on related topics, especially those with global health importance and relevance to low-income and middle-income countries. The journal publishes various content types, including Articles, Reviews, Comments, Correspondence, Health Policy, and Personal Views, along with Series and Commissions aiming to drive positive change in clinical practice and health policy in diabetes and endocrinology.
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