20-Year Comparative Survival and Mortality of Cancer of the Stomach by Age, Sex, Race, Stage, Grade, Cohort Entry Time-Period, Disease Duration & Selected ICD-O-3 Oncologic Phenotypes: A Systematic Review of 157,258 Cases for Diagnosis Years 1973-2014: (SEER*Stat 8.3.4).

A. Milano
{"title":"20-Year Comparative Survival and Mortality of Cancer of the Stomach by Age, Sex, Race, Stage, Grade, Cohort Entry Time-Period, Disease Duration & Selected ICD-O-3 Oncologic Phenotypes: A Systematic Review of 157,258 Cases for Diagnosis Years 1973-2014: (SEER*Stat 8.3.4).","authors":"A. Milano","doi":"10.17849/insm-48-1-1-19.1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Background and Importance.-Globally, almost one million new cases of stomach cancer were estimated to have occurred in 2012 (952,000 cases, 6.8% of the total), making it the fifth most common malignancy in the world, after lung, breast, colorectal, and prostate. Gastric cancer was the world's third leading cause of cancer mortality in 2012, responsible for 723,000 deaths, 8.8% of total cancer deaths.1 In 2017, 28,000 new cases and 10,960 deaths are estimated for gastric cancer in the United States.2 Estimated United States prevalence counts on January 1, 2014, for patients diagnosed within the previous 5-years was 48,271 (SEER Cancer Statistics Review-2014). Prognostic indices of survival & mortality in patients with gastric cancer are related to tumor stage including nodal involvement, direct tumor extension beyond the gastric wall, and wide-spread dissemination. Tumor histologic grade (degree of loss of cellular differentiation), and oncotype-specific ICD-O-3 phenotypes also provides important prognostic information. By more than 90%, the most common histologic type of stomach cancer is adenocarcinoma. The National Cancer Institute (NCI) ICD-O-3 SEER Site/Histology Validation List catalog (September 18, 2015) enumerates almost 200 subtypes for gastric cancer sites C160-C166, C168-C169. Based on the results of molecular evaluation of 295 primary gastric adenocarcinomas reported to The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) project in 2014, a novel classification separating gastric cancers into four subtypes according to Epstein-Barr virus positive status, microsatellite instability, chromosomal instability, or genomic stability was proposed.3> Of interest, Helicobacter Pylori infection and its role in the development of gastric cancer is not mentioned. All cancer has a genetic basis. However, given the histologic and etiologic heterogeneity of gastric cancer, eventual comprehensive molecular characterization and genomic sequencing with identification of chromosomal aberrations, nucleotide substitutions mortality follow-up study is focused on short- and long-term comparative patient outcomes of stomach adenocarcinoma, ICD-O-3 8140-8147, and other selected gastric cancer oncotypes. Objective.-To update trends in incidence, prevalence, short- and long-term survival, and mortality of gastric cancer using the statistical database of SEER*Stat 8.3.4 for diagnosis years 1973-2014 employing multiple case selection variables. Methods.-A retrospective, population-based study using nationally representative data from the National Cancer Institute's (NCI) Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) program to evaluate 157,258 cases for diagnosis years 1973-2014 comparing multiple variables of age, sex, race, stage, grade, cohort entry time-period, disease duration and histologic oncotype: Relative survival statistics were analyzed in two cohorts: 1973-1994 and 1995-2014. Survival statistics were derived from: SEER*Stat Database: Incidence - SEER 9 Regs Research Data, November 2016 Submission (1973-2014) Released April 2017. Results.-By more than 90%, the most common type of stomach cancer is adenocarcinoma. From 1975 to 2014, gastric cancer incidence has been steadily decreasing in the United States at the rate of -1.5% per year. In a total of 157,258 cases of invasive staged cancer of the stomach, mean age in males was 67.5 years, females 69.6 years, both male & female 67.4 years. Greater than 90% of cases occurred between ages 45-85+ years with the zenith in males at 70-74 years (15.1%) and 85+ years in females (17.9%). The overall annual US death rate per 100,000 per year for stomach cancer from 1975 to 2014 has decreased from 5.1 to 3.1, but excess mortality at 0-5 years remains exceedingly high. Mortality is a function of incidence and survival, and unfortunately, almost all of this decrease is due to the decrease in incidence of stomach cancer. Of the 157,258 invasive cases, 86.6% were clinically staged and 76.8% were histologically graded. Conclusions.-Given the histologic and etiologic heterogeneity of gastric cancer, major improvements in mortality and survival outcomes await the development of diagnostic markers for earlier diagnosis, and genomic sequencing and identification of chromosomal aberrations, nucleotide substitutions and epigenetic modifications that drive malignant transformation, for the development of targeted therapies for almost 200 gastric cancer subtypes.","PeriodicalId":39345,"journal":{"name":"Journal of insurance medicine (New York, N.Y.)","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"34","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of insurance medicine (New York, N.Y.)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.17849/insm-48-1-1-19.1","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Medicine","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 34

Abstract

Background and Importance.-Globally, almost one million new cases of stomach cancer were estimated to have occurred in 2012 (952,000 cases, 6.8% of the total), making it the fifth most common malignancy in the world, after lung, breast, colorectal, and prostate. Gastric cancer was the world's third leading cause of cancer mortality in 2012, responsible for 723,000 deaths, 8.8% of total cancer deaths.1 In 2017, 28,000 new cases and 10,960 deaths are estimated for gastric cancer in the United States.2 Estimated United States prevalence counts on January 1, 2014, for patients diagnosed within the previous 5-years was 48,271 (SEER Cancer Statistics Review-2014). Prognostic indices of survival & mortality in patients with gastric cancer are related to tumor stage including nodal involvement, direct tumor extension beyond the gastric wall, and wide-spread dissemination. Tumor histologic grade (degree of loss of cellular differentiation), and oncotype-specific ICD-O-3 phenotypes also provides important prognostic information. By more than 90%, the most common histologic type of stomach cancer is adenocarcinoma. The National Cancer Institute (NCI) ICD-O-3 SEER Site/Histology Validation List catalog (September 18, 2015) enumerates almost 200 subtypes for gastric cancer sites C160-C166, C168-C169. Based on the results of molecular evaluation of 295 primary gastric adenocarcinomas reported to The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) project in 2014, a novel classification separating gastric cancers into four subtypes according to Epstein-Barr virus positive status, microsatellite instability, chromosomal instability, or genomic stability was proposed.3> Of interest, Helicobacter Pylori infection and its role in the development of gastric cancer is not mentioned. All cancer has a genetic basis. However, given the histologic and etiologic heterogeneity of gastric cancer, eventual comprehensive molecular characterization and genomic sequencing with identification of chromosomal aberrations, nucleotide substitutions mortality follow-up study is focused on short- and long-term comparative patient outcomes of stomach adenocarcinoma, ICD-O-3 8140-8147, and other selected gastric cancer oncotypes. Objective.-To update trends in incidence, prevalence, short- and long-term survival, and mortality of gastric cancer using the statistical database of SEER*Stat 8.3.4 for diagnosis years 1973-2014 employing multiple case selection variables. Methods.-A retrospective, population-based study using nationally representative data from the National Cancer Institute's (NCI) Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) program to evaluate 157,258 cases for diagnosis years 1973-2014 comparing multiple variables of age, sex, race, stage, grade, cohort entry time-period, disease duration and histologic oncotype: Relative survival statistics were analyzed in two cohorts: 1973-1994 and 1995-2014. Survival statistics were derived from: SEER*Stat Database: Incidence - SEER 9 Regs Research Data, November 2016 Submission (1973-2014) Released April 2017. Results.-By more than 90%, the most common type of stomach cancer is adenocarcinoma. From 1975 to 2014, gastric cancer incidence has been steadily decreasing in the United States at the rate of -1.5% per year. In a total of 157,258 cases of invasive staged cancer of the stomach, mean age in males was 67.5 years, females 69.6 years, both male & female 67.4 years. Greater than 90% of cases occurred between ages 45-85+ years with the zenith in males at 70-74 years (15.1%) and 85+ years in females (17.9%). The overall annual US death rate per 100,000 per year for stomach cancer from 1975 to 2014 has decreased from 5.1 to 3.1, but excess mortality at 0-5 years remains exceedingly high. Mortality is a function of incidence and survival, and unfortunately, almost all of this decrease is due to the decrease in incidence of stomach cancer. Of the 157,258 invasive cases, 86.6% were clinically staged and 76.8% were histologically graded. Conclusions.-Given the histologic and etiologic heterogeneity of gastric cancer, major improvements in mortality and survival outcomes await the development of diagnostic markers for earlier diagnosis, and genomic sequencing and identification of chromosomal aberrations, nucleotide substitutions and epigenetic modifications that drive malignant transformation, for the development of targeted therapies for almost 200 gastric cancer subtypes.
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按年龄、性别、种族、分期、分级、队列进入时间、病程和选定的ICD-O-3肿瘤表型分类的胃癌20年比较生存率和死亡率:1973-2014年157,258例诊断病例的系统评价(SEER*Stat 8.3.4)。
背景和重要性-据估计,2012年全球新增癌症近100万例(952000例,占总数的6.8%),使其成为世界上第五大最常见的恶性肿瘤,仅次于肺癌、乳腺癌、结直肠癌和前列腺癌。癌症是2012年癌症死亡率的第三大原因,造成723000人死亡,占癌症总死亡人数的8.8%。1 2017年,美国癌症估计新增28000例,死亡10960例。2 2014年1月1日美国估计患病率,过去5年内确诊的患者为48271人(SEER癌症统计评论2014)。癌症患者的生存和死亡率的预后指标与肿瘤分期有关,包括淋巴结受累、肿瘤直接扩展到胃壁外和广泛扩散。肿瘤组织学分级(细胞分化损失程度)和肿瘤类型特异性ICD-O-3表型也提供了重要的预后信息。超过90%的癌症最常见的组织学类型是腺癌。国家癌症研究所(NCI)ICD-O-3 SEER位点/组织学验证列表目录(2015年9月18日)列举了癌症位点C160-C166、C168-C169的近200种亚型。根据2014年癌症基因组图谱(TCGA)项目报告的295例原发性胃癌的分子评估结果,提出了一种新的分类方法,根据EB病毒阳性状态、微卫星不稳定性、染色体不稳定性或基因组稳定性将胃癌分为四种亚型。3>感兴趣的是,幽门螺杆菌感染及其在癌症发展中的作用尚未提及。所有癌症都有遗传基础。然而,考虑到癌症的组织学和病因学异质性,最终全面的分子表征和基因组测序以及染色体畸变的鉴定,核苷酸替代死亡率随访研究集中于胃腺癌的短期和长期比较患者结果,ICD-O-3 8140-8147,以及其他选定的癌症肿瘤类型。目标-使用SEER*Stat 8.3.4的统计数据库,采用多个病例选择变量,更新1973-2014诊断年癌症的发病率、患病率、短期和长期生存率以及死亡率的趋势。方法-一项基于人群的回顾性研究,使用来自国家癌症研究所(NCI)监测、流行病学和最终结果(SEER)计划的全国代表性数据,评估1973-2014年诊断年份的157258例病例,比较年龄、性别、种族、阶段、等级、队列进入时间段、,疾病持续时间和组织学肿瘤类型:分析了1973-1994年和1995-2014年两个队列的相对生存统计数据。生存统计数据来源于:SEER*统计数据库:发病率-SEER 9 Regs研究数据,2016年11月提交(1973-2014),2017年4月发布。结果-癌症最常见的类型是腺癌,占90%以上。从1975年到2014年,癌症发病率在美国以每年-1.5%的速度稳步下降。在157258例侵袭性癌症患者中,男性平均年龄为67.5岁,女性平均年龄为69.6岁,男性和女性均为67.4岁。90%以上的病例发生在45-85岁以上的年龄段,其中男性在70-74岁时达到顶峰(15.1%),女性在85岁以上(17.9%)。1975年至2014年,美国每年每10万人死于癌症的总死亡率从5.1下降到3.1,但0-5岁的超额死亡率仍然极高。死亡率是发病率和存活率的函数,不幸的是,几乎所有这些下降都是由于癌症发病率的下降。在157258例侵袭性病例中,86.6%为临床分期,76.8%为组织学分级。结论-鉴于癌症的组织学和病因学异质性,死亡率和生存结果的重大改善等待着早期诊断的诊断标志物的开发,以及驱动恶性转化的染色体畸变、核苷酸取代和表观遗传修饰的基因组测序和鉴定,用于开发针对近200种癌症亚型的靶向治疗。
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期刊介绍: The Journal of Insurance Medicine is a peer reviewed scientific journal sponsored by the American Academy of Insurance Medicine, and is published quarterly. Subscriptions to the Journal of Insurance Medicine are included in your AAIM membership.
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