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Revue D Epidemiologie Et De Sante Publique | 2008

Cancer incidence and mortality in France over the period 1980-2005.

Aurélien Belot; Pascale Grosclaude; Nadine Bossard; Eric Jougla; E. Benhamou; Patricia Delafosse; A.-V. Guizard; F. Molinié; Arlette Danzon; Simona Bara; Anne Marie Bouvier; Brigitte Trétarre; F. Binder-Foucard; Marc Colonna; L. Daubisse; G. Hédelin; Guy Launoy; N. Le Stang; Marc Maynadié; Alain Monnereau; Xavier Troussard; Jean Faivre; Albert Collignon; I. Janoray; Patrick Arveux; Antoine Buemi; N. Raverdy; C. Schvartz; M. Bovet; L. Chérié-Challine

BACKGROUND The objective of this study was to provide updated estimates of national trends in cancer incidence and mortality for France for 1980-2005. METHODS Twenty-five cancer sites were analysed. Incidence data over the 1975-2003 period were collected from 17 registries working at the department level, covering 16% of the French population. Mortality data for 1975-2004 were provided by the Inserm. National incidence estimates were based on the use of mortality as a correlate of incidence, mortality being available at both department and national levels. Observed incidence and mortality data were modelled using an age-cohort approach, including an interaction term. Short-term predictions from that model gave estimates of new cancer cases and cancer deaths in 2005 for France. RESULTS The number of new cancer cases in 2005 was approximately 320,000. This corresponds to an 89% increase since 1980. Demographic changes were responsible for almost half of that increase. The remainder was largely explained by increases in prostate cancer incidence in men and breast cancer incidence in women. The relative increase in the world age-standardised incidence rate was 39%. The number of deaths from cancer increased from 130,000 to 146,000. This 13% increase was much lower than anticipated on the basis of demographic changes (37%). The relative decrease in the age-standardised mortality rate was 22%. This decrease was steeper over the 2000-2005 period in both men and women. Alcohol-related cancer incidence and mortality continued to decrease in men. The increasing trend of lung cancer incidence and mortality among women continued; this cancer was the second cause of cancer death among women. Breast cancer incidence increased regularly, whereas mortality has decreased slowly since the end of the 1990s. CONCLUSION This study confirmed the divergence of cancer incidence and mortality trends in France over the 1980-2005 period. This divergence can be explained by the combined effects of a decrease in the incidence of the most aggressive cancers and an increase in the incidence of less aggressive cancers, partly due to changes in medical practices leading to earlier diagnoses.


Gastroenterologie Clinique Et Biologique | 2004

Incidence of gastrointestinal cancers in France

Anne-Marie Bouvier; Laurent Remontet; Eric Jougla; Guy Launoy; Pascale Grosclaude; Antoine Buemi; Brigitte Trétarre; Michel Velten; Vincent Dancourt; François Menegoz; Anne-Valérie Guizard; Josette Macé Lesec’h; Jung Peng; Paolo Bercelli; Patrick Arveux; Jacques Estève; Jean Faivre

AIM Monitoring cancer incidence and time trends is essential for cancer research and health care planning. The aim of the study was to compare the incidence of gastrointestinal cancers in twelve administrative area in France to estimate the national cancer incidence during 2000 compared with the preceding 20 years. METHODS Incidence data was provided by cancer registries and mortality data by the French national medical research institute (INSERM). The two data sets were modeled separately over the period 1988-1997 using age-cohort models. The incidence/mortality ratio obtained from these models was applied to the mortality rates of an age-cohort model of the entire population. RESULTS The estimated number of new cases of gastrointestinal cancer was 61,465 in 2000. Colorectal cancer was the leading localization with 36,257 cases. The incidence of gastrointestinal cancers was slightly higher in northern than in southern area. Incidence of esophageal cancer was three times that of liver cancer. Variations in incidence were less marked for other localizations. The incidence of gastric and esophageal cancer in the male population decreased between 1980 and 2000, on average by slightly more than 2% per year. Incidence of other cancers increased. The number of new cases of colorectal cancer increased by 50%. The rise in the incidence of liver cancer was particularly striking, with an increase from 2000 incident cases in 1980 to nearly 6000 in 2000. CONCLUSION For most localizations, incidence of gastrointestinal cancers displays few geographical differences in France, but there has been a striking change in incidence trends over the past 20 years.


European Journal of Cancer Prevention | 1997

Cancer incidence and mortality in France in 1975-95

F. Menegoz; R. J. Black; Patrick Arveux; V. Magne; J. Ferlay; Antoine Buemi; P. M. Carli; G. Chapelain; Jean Faivre; M. Gignoux; Pascale Grosclaude; J. Mace-Lesec'h; Nicole Raverdy; P. Schaffer

The aims of the European Network of Cancer Registries (ENCR) are to improve the quality, comparability and availability of cancer registry data in Europe. This paper on cancer incidence and mortality in France presents the most recent available data, with short-term projections to 1995, and a commentary based, where possible, on epidemiological research carried out in France. Cancer incidence in men in France increased throughout the study period 1975 to 1995, from 92,000 new cases in 1975 to about 135,000 in 1995. This increase was partly due to the ageing of the French population, but incidence rates have also increased, particularly from 1975 to 1985. The trend appears to be levelling off in the 1990s, with an incidence rate in 1995 of about 482 per 100,000 (this and subsequent rates quoted are standardized to the European Standard Population). Among women, the all-cancer incidence rates also increased during the 1970s and 1980s. Although the rate of increase was less pronounced than in men, the trend is continuing in the 1990s. The estimated age standardized rate in 1995 was 309 per 100,000, representing 104,000 new cases. The main components of these changes in the last decade were, for men, increases in large bowel and prostate cancer, which have been partly compensated for by decreases in oral cavity, larynx and stomach cancer. For women the trend was dominated by the continuing increase in breast cancer with increases also in large bowel and lung cancers. Of the numerically important cancers in women, only stomach cancer has shown a clear decline. The situation in 1995 was that breast cancer remained the predominant cancer affecting women in France, accounting for almost one third of all new cases of cancer diagnosed and one fifth of cancer deaths. The next most frequent cancers in women were those of the large bowel. Regrettably, incidence rates of both breast and bowel cancer are increasing in women. For men in France the most frequent cancers in 1995 were those of the prostate, large bowel and lung, all of which increased in incidence since 1975. Although it is estimated that there will be more newly diagnosed cases of prostate cancer than lung cancer in 1995, the latter will cause many more deaths, particularly of young men.


Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2008

Treatment and prognosis of hepatocellular carcinoma: A population based study in France

Frédéric Borie; Anne-Marie Bouvier; Astrid Herrero; Jean Faivre; Guy Launoy; Patricia Delafosse; Michel Velten; Antoine Buemi; Jun Peng; Pascale Grosclaude; Brigitte Trétarre

Few data are available from population‐based statistics on hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The aim of this study was to report on their management and their prognosis in a French population.


International Journal of Cancer | 2000

National cancer prevalence estimation in France.

Marc Colonna; Guy Hédelin; Jacques Estève; Pascale Grosclaude; Guy Launoy; Antoine Buemi; Patrick Arveux; Brigitte Trétarre; Gilles Chaplain; Josette Mace Lesec'h; Nicole Raverdy; Paule Marie Carli; François Menegoz; Jean Faivre

In France, as in several other European countries, prevalence has to be estimated from the modelling of 2 of the 3 basic epidemiological measures of incidence, mortality, and survival. Since, in these countries, follow‐up of cancer patients is only made in a few registries, we explored the feasibility of estimating prevalence in the absence of follow‐up data. The method , which used only incidence and mortality, was validated on Danish data and applied to France. For this latter country, the estimation procedure is based on the recorded mortality data and an estimate of incidence for the entire country. It is applied to selected sites of cancer, which account for 80% of the estimated incidence. In 1992, the prevalence of patients who had such a diagnosis amounts to 538,000 women and 424,000 men. The most frequent cancer sites are head and neck, breast, and large bowel. Most of the cancer sites present an increase in prevalence proportion between 1987 and 1992. The larger increases concern breast and prostate cancer. Int. J. Cancer 87:301–304, 2000.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2004

Cancer incidence among adolescents in France.

Emmanuel Desandes; Brigitte Lacour; Danièle Sommelet; Antoine Buemi; Arlette Danzon; Patricia Delafosse; Pascale Grosclaude; Josette Mace-Lesech; Nicole Raverdy‐Bourdon; Brigitte Trétarre; Michel Velten; Laurence Brugières

In France, cancer ranks third as the most significant cause of mortality in young people. However, the incidence, the survival, and the management of adolescent cancers have never been studied. The aim of this study is to investigate incidence rate (IR) of adolescents with cancer from data recorded in French Cancer Registries covering eight administrative areas, representing 10% of the French population, over a 10‐year period (from 1988 to 1997).


Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health | 1999

Cancer registry data based estimation of regional cancer incidence: application to breast and colorectal cancer in French administrative regions.

Marc Colonna; Pascale Grosclaude; Jean Faivre; Ali Revzani; Patrick Arveux; Gilles Chaplain; Brigitte Trétarre; Guy Launoy; Josette Mace Lesec'h; Nicole Raverdy; Paul Schaffer; Antoine Buemi; François Menegoz; Roger J Black

STUDY OBJECTIVE: In many countries, cancer registries cover only a small part of the national population. Cancer incidence for the rest of the country has therefore to be estimated. This can be done from mortality data using the relation between incidence and mortality observed in the cancer registry areas. Such an approach was used to study geographical variation and trend of colorectal and breast cancer incidence in France where 10% of the national population is covered by cancer registries. DESIGN: This study applies the incidence/mortality ratios of cancer registry areas to regional mortality data to obtain an estimation of cancer incidence at a given point in time. Age and period effects are included in the statistical models. MAIN RESULTS: The incidence estimations are given for 21 administrative regions and three time points (1985, 1990, 1995). The European standardised incidence rates for breast cancer ranged from 86.8 to 128.8. For colorectal cancer, these rates ranged from 48.2 to 79.6 for men, and from 32.5 to 48.8 for women. Breast cancer incidence has increased considerably between 1985 and 1995 with a higher increase in the north than in the south of France. The incidence of colorectal cancer has also increased, albeit to a lesser extent. CONCLUSION: The incidence estimation method proposed leads to regional incidence rates that are useful for planning health care services on a regional basis and may also be used to study regional differences in incidence. This method is useful when only partial incidence data are available.


Gastroenterologie Clinique Et Biologique | 2007

Place of multidisciplinary consulting meetings and clinical trials in the management of colorectal cancer in France in 2000

Anne-Marie Bouvier; Eric Bauvin; Arlette Danzon; Pascale Grosclaude; Patricia Delafosse; Antoine Buemi; Brigitte Trétarre; Nicole Raverdy; Nabil Maarouf; Michel Velten; Guy Launoy; Jean Faivre

AIM The 1998 consensus conference dealing with colon cancer, and the 2003 Cancer Plan underlined the need for multidisciplinary meetings and for including patients in therapeutic trials. The aim of this study, which pooled data from the French Cancer Registries operating within the Francim network, was to report on diagnostic and therapeutic practices in the general French population before implementation of the Cancer Plan. METHODS The study population was composed of 2935 patients with colorectal cancer diagnosed in 2000 in twelve French administrative districts accounting for 15% of the geographical area of France. Data were collected using a standardized procedure. Three categories of place of diagnosis were defined: public university hospitals, public non-university hospitals, and private clinics. RESULTS Overall, multidisciplinary meeting was conducted for 32.2% of patients with colorectal cancer. This proportion varied from 6.4% to 76.9%, depending on the geographical area (P<0.001). The place of diagnosis affected this practice: 52% in public university hospitals, 31% in public non-university hospitals and 29% in private clinics (P<0.001). In multivariate analysis, age (OR(>75 years): 0.71, P<0.001), site (OR(rectum): 1.80, P<0.001) and health care facilities (OR(public non-university vs public university): 0.36, P<0.001, OR(private vs public university): 0.40, P<0.001) affected the use of multidisciplinary meeting. Overall, 4.3% of patients were included in a therapeutic trial. This concerned 6.2% of patients aged under 75 and 1.0% of those aged over 75 (P<0.001). The proportion of inclusions, taking into account the trials proposed in 2000 and 2001, varied from 0.7% to 16.4% according to geographical area (P<0.001). This proportion was 10.3% if there had been multidisciplinary meeting and 5.1% if not (P<0.001). Neither cancer site, gender, nor healthcare facility responsible for diagnosis influenced trial inclusion. CONCLUSION This population-based study underlines geographical variations in the management of colorectal cancer in France. In 2000, multidisciplinary meeting was conducted for an insufficient proportion of patients, and an insufficient number of patients were included in therapeutic trials. Repeating the same survey in 2005 will provide information on the effects of the Cancer Plan and the diffusion of these recommendations.


JAMA Dermatology | 2013

Distinctive features of melanoma and its management in elderly patients: a population-based study in France.

Dragos Ciocan; Coralie Barbe; F. Aubin; F. Granel-Brocard; Dan Lipsker; Michel Velten; Sophie Dalac; F. Truchetet; Catherine Michel; Audrey Mitschler; G. Arnoult; Antoine Buemi; Stéphane Dalle; Philippe Bernard; Anne-Sophie Woronoff; F. Grange

IMPORTANCE Life expectancy is increasing in most developed countries, and elderly people have the highest incidence of melanoma. OBJECTIVE To identify characteristics of melanoma and its management in the elderly compared with younger patients. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Retrospective population-based study of incident cases of primary melanoma in 1621 patients with stage I or II melanoma in 2004 and 2008. Questionnaires administered to physicians and a survey of cancer registries and pathology laboratories were used to obtain data. The study was conducted in 5 regions in northeastern France. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Characteristics of patients and tumors, circumstances of diagnosis, and further management in older patients (≥70 years, 487 patients [30.0%]) compared with younger ones (<70 years, 1134 [70.0%]). RESULTS Older patients had more frequent melanomas of the head and neck (29.4% vs 8.7%; P < .001) and of the nodular, lentigo maligna, or acral lentiginous histologic subtypes. They had thicker and more frequently ulcerated tumors, categorized as T3 or T4 in 36.7% of cases vs 20.1% in younger patients. Diagnosis of melanoma occurred more frequently in a general practice setting and less frequently in direct consultation with a dermatologist or regular screening for skin cancer. Time to definitive excision was longer in older patients, and 16.8% of them compared with 5.0% of the younger population had insufficient excision margins (P < .001). A sentinel lymph node biopsy was performed in 23.3% of the older patients with melanoma thicker than 1 mm vs 41.4% in the younger patients (P < .001). Adjuvant therapy was less frequently started in older patients and was prematurely stopped in a higher proportion of that population. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Age-related variations are observed at every step of melanoma management. The most important concerns are access of elderly people to settings for early diagnosis and excision with appropriate margins.


European Journal of Cancer Prevention | 2008

Trends in incidence of digestive cancers in France.

Côme Lepage; Laurent Remontet; Guy Launoy; Brigitte Trétarre; Pascale Grosclaude; Marc Colonna; Michel Velten; Antoine Buemi; Arlette Danzon; F. Molinié; Nabil Maarouf; Nadine Bossard; Anne-Marie Bouvier; Jean Faivre

The objective of this study was to analyse trends in the incidence of digestive cancers in France. Observed incidence and mortality data in the population covered by cancer registries were modelled using age-cohort models. An estimation of the incidence/mortality ratio was obtained from these models and was applied to the mortality rates predicted from an age-cohort model for the entire French population. Site-specific standardized-incidence rates by 1-year intervals and cumulative rate 0–74 years by birth cohort were estimated. On average, age-standardized incidence rates of large bowel cancers increased by 1.0% per year in men and 0.8% in women from 1980 to 2000. The estimated cumulative rate increased from 4.0% for men born in 1913 to 4.8% for those born in 1953. The corresponding values in women were 2.5 and 2.9%. The most striking increase in incidence was seen for primary liver cancer with an increase from 2000 incident cases in 1980 to nearly 6000 in 2000. The estimated cumulative rate was 0.5% for men born in 1913 and 2.9% for those born in 1953. The increase in incidence was lower for pancreas cancer. A decrease in the incidence of stomach cancer was observed for both sexes and of oesophageal cancer in men by slightly more than 2%. The study showed large changes in the cancer burden in France between 1980 and 2000.

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Michel Velten

University of Strasbourg

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Jean Faivre

University of Burgundy

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Arlette Danzon

Institut de veille sanitaire

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Marc Colonna

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Grenoble

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Patricia Delafosse

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Grenoble

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Nicole Raverdy

University of Picardie Jules Verne

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Laurent Remontet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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