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Cancer epidemiology in Central, South and Eastern European countries
Authors:Vrdoljak Eduard,Wojtukiewicz Marek Z,Pienkowski Tadeusz,Bodoky Gyorgy,Berzinec Peter,Finek Jindrich,Todorović Vladimir,Borojević Nenad,Croitoru Adina  South Eastern European Research Oncology Group
Affiliation:University Hospital Split, School of Medicine, Center of Oncology, Spinci?eva 1, 21000 Split, Croatia. eduard.vrdoljak@st.htnet.hr
Abstract:

Aim

To collect cancer epidemiology data in South Eastern European countries as a basis for potential comparison of their performance in cancer care.

Methods

The South Eastern European Research Oncology Group (SEEROG) collected and analyzed epidemiological data on incidence and mortality that reflect cancer management in 8 countries – Croatia, Czech Republic, Hungary, Romania, Poland, Slovakia, and Serbia and Montenegro in the last 20-40 years.

Results

The most common cancer type in men in all countries was lung cancer, followed by colorectal and prostate cancer, with the exception of the Czech Republic, where prostate cancer and colorectal cancer were more common. The most frequent cancer in women was breast cancer followed by colorectal cancer, with the exceptions of Romania and Central Serbia where cervical cancer was the second most common. Cancer mortality data from the last 20-40 years revealed two different patterns in men. In Romania and in Serbia and Montenegro, there was a trend toward an increase, while in the other countries mortality was declining, after increasing for a number of years. In women, a steady decline was observed over many years in the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Slovakia, while in the other countries it remained unchanged.

Conclusions

There are striking variations in the risk of different cancers by geographic area. Most of the international variation is due to exposure to known or suspected risk factors which provides a clear challenge to prevention. There are some differences in incidence and mortality that cannot be explained by exposure to known risk factors or treatment availabilities.On a global scale, cancer has become a major public health problem and an increasingly important contributor to the burden of disease. Based on the most recent available international data, there were an estimated 12.7 million new cancer cases, 7.6 million deaths from cancer, and 28 million persons alive with cancer within five years from the initial diagnosis (1-3). The most common cancers in the world were lung (1.61 million cases), breast (1.38 million), and colorectal cancer (1.24 million) (3). Because of its poor prognosis, lung cancer was also the most common cause of death (1.38 million), followed by gastric (737 000 deaths), and liver cancer (695 000 deaths) (1-4).Priority setting for cancer control and cancer services in any region needs to be based on knowledge of the cancer burden and the local mix of predominant cancer types (5). According to estimates of global cancer burden made by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), the incidence and mortality rates from many specific types of cancer and all cancers combined vary widely by geographic locality (6). Moreover, the IARC also estimated that over half of newly diagnosed cases and two-thirds of cancer deaths occur in low and medium-income countries (6). There are striking variations in the pattern of cancer by site from region to region (7). The large differences in incidence and mortality in different countries may reflect a combination of differences in prevalence of underlying risk factors, differences in host susceptibility, and/or variations in cancer detection, reporting, classification systems, treatment, and follow-up. Among European countries, wide differences in the quality of cancer care are observed, especially when comparison is made between “old” and “new” EU members or between developed and developing countries (8). Cancer survival is significantly lower in Eastern European countries, including the new Member States, than in the EU 15 (9-12). Transitional countries and middle income countries are frequently left forgotten “in between” and the cancer problem in these countries is among the worst and fastest growing (8).In this report, we provide an analysis, which we propose as a foundation for detailed evaluation of cancer care in selected Central, Southern and Eastern European countries, represented by members of the South Eastern European Research Oncology Group (SEEROG). Our epidemiological analysis indicates the scale of the problem of oncological care in individual countries and shows current trends in the incidence of particular cancers. Comparison of status of oncology between countries in Eastern, Southern, and Central European region has never been undertaken before and key barriers to deliver appropriate quality of care have not previously been identified.
Keywords:
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