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Scenarios of future lung cancer incidence by educational level: Modelling study in Denmark
Authors:Gwenn Menvielle  Isabelle Soerjomataram  Esther de Vries  Gerda Engholm  Jan J. Barendregt  Jan Willem Coebergh  Anton E. Kunst
Affiliation:1. Global Tobacco Control Branch, Office on Smoking and Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, CDC, Atlanta, Georgia, USA;2. Nigeria Federal Ministry of Health, Abuja, Nigeria;3. Nigeria National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), Abuja, Nigeria;4. World Health Organization, Country Office, Abuja, Nigeria;5. Africa Regional Office, World Health Organization, Brazzaville, Congo
Abstract:ObjectiveTo model future trends in lung cancer incidence in Denmark by education under different scenarios for cigarette smoking.MethodsLung cancer incidence until 2050 was modelled using Prevent software. We estimated lung cancer incidence under a baseline scenario and under four alternative scenarios for smoking reduction: decreasing initiation rates among the young, increasing cessation rates among smokers, a scenario combining both changes and a levelling-up scenario in which people with low and medium levels of education acquired the smoking prevalence of the highly educated. Danish National Health Interview Surveys (1987–2005) and cancer registry data combined with individual education status from Statistics Denmark were used for empirical input.ResultsUnder the baseline scenario, lung cancer rates are expected to decrease for most educational groups during the next few decades, but educational inequalities will increase further. Under the alternative scenarios, an additional decrease in lung cancer rates will be observed from 2030 onwards, but only from 2050 onwards it will be observed under the initiation scenario. The cessation and the combined scenarios show the largest decrease in lung cancer rates for all educational groups. However, in none of these scenarios would the relative differences between educational groups be reduced. A modest decrease in these inequalities will be observed under the levelling-up scenario.DiscussionOur analyses show that relative inequalities in lung cancer incidence rates will tend to increase. They may be reduced to a small extent if the smoking prevalence of people with a low level of education was to converge towards those more highly educated people. An important decrease in lung cancer rates will be observed in all educational groups, however, especially when focusing on both initiation and cessation strategies.
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