6533b828fe1ef96bd1287b99

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Survival and cure trends for European children, adolescents and young adults diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia from 1982 to 2002

Stefano GuzzinatiRafael Marcos-grageraSilvia RossiMilena SantRafael Peris-bonetMarina VercelliEmmanuel DesandesMichel ColemanFreddie BrayHermann BrennerMariano SantaquilaniMaria ZwierkoOscar ZurriagaJan Willem CoeberghEmanuele CrocettiRoberta De AngelisAndrea TavillaGemma GattaAlessandra RavaioliSilvia FrancisciFabio FalciniRosario TuminoPaolo RoazziLaufey TryggvadottirJadwiga RachtanFranco BerrinoDaniela PierannunzioTrama AnnalisaPaolo BailiDavid Brewster

subject

MalePediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentLymphoblastic LeukemiaPopulationacute lymphoblastic leukemiaHistory 21st Centuryacute lymphoblastic leukemia; children; adolescents and young adults; survival and cure trendsEurope/epidemiologyYoung AdultchildrenHumansMedicineRegistriesYoung adultChildeducationddc:613education.field_of_studybusiness.industryAge FactorsInfant NewbornAbsolute risk reductionInfantCancerHematologyPrecursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-LymphomaHistory 20th CenturyEuropean regionmedicine.diseasesurvival and cure trendsPrecursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma/epidemiology/history/mortalityChild PreschoolEarly adolescentsFemaleOriginal Articles and Brief Reportsbusinessadolescents and young adults

description

Proportion cured is a potentially more informative cancer outcome measurement than 5-year survival. We present population-based estimates of cure for young patients diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in Europe from 1982 to 2002. Thirty-five European cancer registries provided data. Survival was estimated by age, period of diagnosis and European region, and used as input for parametric cure models, which assume cured patients have the same mortality as the general population. For acute lymphoblastic leukemia diagnosed in 1–14 year olds in 2000–2002, over 77% were estimated cured. The proportion cured improved significantly over the study period: an impressive 26–58% in infants (up to 1 year), 70–90% in 1–4 year olds, 63–86% in 5–9 year olds, 52–77% in 10–14 year olds, and 44–50% in 15–24 year olds. Regional variations in proportion cured reduced over time for 1–14 year-olds, but persisted in infants and 15–24 year olds. Five-year survival was always slightly higher than proportion cured. Considerable proportions of young patients were estimated cured of acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Nevertheless, a small excess risk of death persisted beyond five years after diagnosis when patients remained at risk for late treatment effects, late relapses and second primaries.

https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2012.071597