6533b856fe1ef96bd12b1cbe

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Incidence trends of vulvar squamous cell carcinoma in Italy from 1990 to 2015

Annibale BiggeriSanto ScalziLauro BucchiAlessandra RavaioliWalter MazzuccoRocco GalassoAnna Luisa CaiazzoMaria MichiaraLucia MangoneOrietta GiulianiStefano RossoRosario TuminoRosaria CesaraccioMichele MagoniAdele CaldarellaGuido MazzoleniStefano FerrettiAnna MelcarneMassimo RuggeAngela PintoFederica ToffoluttiLorenza BoschettiRosa FilibertiFabio FalciniSilvano PifferPaola PesceFernanda L. LottiF TisanoClaudia CirilliAnnarita CitarellaLuciana GattiMario FuscoMario PretiAngelita BrustolinFlavia BaldacchiniGiuseppe Michele MasanottiRosa VattiatoSusanna VitarelliM RognoniSilvia ManciniGiuseppe SampietroTiziana ScuderiGiovanna Tagliabue

subject

0301 basic medicineHistoryVulvar Squamous Cell CarcinomaAge-period-cohort modelling; Incidence; Trend; Vulvar neoplasms; Carcinoma Squamous Cell; Female; History 20th Century; History 21st Century; Humans; Incidence; Italy; Middle Aged; Vulvar NeoplasmsSettore MED/42 - Igiene Generale E ApplicataHistory 21st CenturyNO03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineAge-period-cohort modellingAge-period-cohort modelling; Incidence; Trend; Vulvar neoplasmsTrendHumansMedicineRisk factorVulvar neoplasmVulvar Neoplasmsbusiness.industryIncidenceIncidence (epidemiology)CarcinomaObstetrics and GynecologyHistory 20th CenturyMiddle Aged21st CenturyConfidence intervalCancer registry20th CenturyTrend analysis030104 developmental biologySquamous CellItalyOncology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisVulvar neoplasms incidence trend age-period-cohort modellingCarcinoma Squamous CellFemalebusinessDemographyCohort study

description

The incidence of vulvar squamous cell carcinoma has increased for decades in most Western countries - a trend virtually restricted to women aged50 or 60 years. In southern Europe, conversely, the trends have been insufficiently studied. This article reports a study from Italy.Thirty-eight local cancer registries, currently covering 15,274,070 women, equivalent to 49.2% of the Italian national female population, participated. Invasive cancers registered between 1990 and 2015 with an International Classification of Diseases for Oncology, 3rd revision, topography code C51 and morphology codes compatible with vulvar squamous cell carcinoma (n = 6294) were eligible. Incidence trends were analysed using joinpoint regression models, with calculation of the estimated annual percent change (EAPC), and age-period-cohort models.Total incidence showed a regular and significant decreasing trend (EAPC, -0.96; 95% confidence interval (CI), -1.43 to -0.48). This was entirely accounted for by women aged ≥60 years (EAPC, -1.34; 95% CI, -1.86 to -0.81). For younger women, the EAPC between 1990 and 2012 was 1.20 (95% CI, 0.34 to 2.06) with a non-significant acceleration thereafter. This pattern did not vary substantially in a sensitivity analysis for the effect of geographic area and duration of the registry. The age-period-cohort analysis revealed a risk decrease in cohorts born between 1905 and 1940 and a new increase in cohorts born since 1945.The decreasing trend observed among older women and the resulting decrease in total rate are at variance with reports from most Western countries. Age-period-cohort analysis confirmed a decreasing trend for earliest birth cohorts and an opposite one for recent ones.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ygyno.2020.03.013