0000000000915687

AUTHOR

Laura Ciccolallo

0000-0002-8415-7106

showing 2 related works from this author

Survival differences between European and US patients with colorectal cancer: role of stage at diagnosis and surgery

2005

Background: Population based colorectal cancer survival among patients diagnosed in 1985–89 was lower in Europe than in the USA (45% v 59% five year relative survival). Aims: To explain this difference in survival using a new analytic approach for patients diagnosed between 1990 and 1991. Subjects: A total of 2492 European and 11 191 US colorectal adenocarcinoma patients registered by 10 European and nine US cancer registries. Methods: We obtained clinical information on disease stage, number of lymph nodes examined, and surgical treatment. We analysed three year relative survival, calculating relative excess risks of death (RERs, referent category US patients) adjusted for age, sex, site, …

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyColorectal cancerpopulation based cancer registriescolorectal cancerAdenocarcinomasurvivalsurgerylymph nodesmedicineHumansRegistriesStage (cooking)Risk factorUSASurvival analysisAgedNeoplasm StagingColorectal CancerRelative survivalcolorectal cancer; population based cancer registries; surgery; lymph nodes; survival; USA; Europebusiness.industryGastroenterologyAbsolute risk reductionCancerMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseSurvival AnalysisUnited StatesConfidence intervalSurgeryEuropeLymphatic MetastasisFemaleColorectal NeoplasmsbusinessGut
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European disparities in malignant digestive endocrine tumours survival.

2009

The aim of this study was to report on malignant digestive endocrine tumours (MDET) prognosis in several European countries. We analysed survival data from 19 cancer registries in 12 European countries on 3,715 MDET diagnosed between 1985 and 1994. The overall 5-year survival rate was 47.5%. It was 58.1% for differentiated MDET and 8.1% for small-cell MDET (p < 0.001), 55.9% for patients under 65 and 37.0% for older patients. Survival rates for small intestinal and colorectal were higher than for the other sites. The 5-year relative survival rates were 60.3% in Northern Europe, 53.6% in Western Continental Europe, 42.5% in the UK, 37.6% in Eastern Europe (p < 0.001). Among well-differentiat…

MaleCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyPathologyGlucagonomaDigestive System NeoplasmsGastroenterologydigestive endocrine tumours survivalInternal medicineEndocrine Gland NeoplasmsmedicineHumansCarcinoid tumourRegistriesSurvival rateAgedNeoplasm StagingGastrinomaRelative survivalbusiness.industryAbsolute risk reductionCancerMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasePrognosisCancer registryEuropeSurvival RateOncologyFemalebusinessInternational journal of cancer
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