» Articles » PMID: 2206568

The Excess Mortality Rate. A Useful Concept in Cancer Epidemiology

Overview
Journal Acta Oncol
Specialty Oncology
Date 1990 Jan 1
PMID 2206568
Citations 10
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Death cause registers and cancer incidence registers are often used to elucidate progress (or lack of progress) in the battle against cancer. Trends in the age-adjusted mortality rate of cancer or of specific cancer types may thus mirror the overall effect of anticancer interventions (prevention, early diagnostics, treatment), but are often influenced by changes in the death cause diagnostics or in the coding routines at the registers. Relative survival rate (or its inversion, relative mortality rate) is sometimes used in order to elucidate improvement due to treatment. It is independent of the death cause diagnoses but often seriously influenced by changes in diagnostics of incident cancer; earlier diagnosis and increased detection of non-fatal cases may thus give an improved relative survival rate, quite unrelated to any improvement in the treatment. In the present paper the excess mortality rate is introduced as a measure which can give additional information concerning effects of anticancer interventions. In contrast to age-adjusted mortality rate it is not dependent on death cause diagnoses or coding routines, and in contrast to relative survival it is independent of the rate of non-fatal incident cancer cases.

Citing Articles

Disparities in Rates of Death From HIV or Tuberculosis Before Age 65 Years, by Race, Ethnicity, and Sex, United States, 2011-2020.

Adekoya N, Chang M, Wortham J, Truman B Public Health Rep. 2023; 139(5):557-565.

PMID: 38111105 PMC: 11324802. DOI: 10.1177/00333549231213328.


Cancer Incidence and Mortality in the Oldest Old: A Nationwide Study in Finland.

Tanskanen T, Seppa K, Virtanen A, Malila N, Pitkaniemi J Am J Epidemiol. 2020; 190(5):836-842.

PMID: 33089310 PMC: 8096474. DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwaa236.


A nationwide analysis of the excess death attributable to diabetes in Brazil.

Bracco P, Gregg E, Rolka D, Schmidt M, Barreto S, Lotufo P J Glob Health. 2020; 10(1):010401.

PMID: 32257151 PMC: 7101024. DOI: 10.7189/jogh.10.010401.


Causes and predictors of mortality in Asian Indians with and without diabetes-10 year follow-up of the Chennai Urban Rural Epidemiology Study (CURES - 150).

Anjana R, Unnikrishnan R, Mugilan P, Jagdish P, Parthasarathy B, Deepa M PLoS One. 2018; 13(7):e0197376.

PMID: 29985959 PMC: 6037346. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0197376.


Excess mortality among 10-year survivors of classical Hodgkin lymphoma in adolescents and young adults.

Xavier A, Epperla N, Taub J, Costa L Am J Hematol. 2017; 93(2):238-245.

PMID: 29114948 PMC: 6863150. DOI: 10.1002/ajh.24964.