Trends in incidence of childhood cancer in Australia, 1983-2006

P. D. Baade, D. R. Youlden, P. C. Valery, T. Hassall, L. Ward, A. C. Green, J. F. Aitken

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Background:There are few population-based childhood cancer registries in the world containing stage and treatment data.Methods:Data from the population-based Australian Paediatric Cancer Registry were used to calculate incidence rates during the most recent 10-year period (1997-2006) and trends in incidence between 1983 and 2006 for the 12 major diagnostic groups of the International Classification of Childhood Cancer.Results:In the period 1997-2006, there were 6184 childhood cancer (at 0-14 years) cases in Australia (157 cases per million children). The commonest cancers were leukaemia (34%), that of the central nervous system (23%) and lymphomas (10%), with incidence the highest at 0-4 years (223 cases per million). Trend analyses showed that incidence among boys for all cancers combined increased by 1.6% per year from 1983 to 1994 but have remained stable since. Incidence rates for girls consistently increased by 0.9% per year. Since 1983, there have been significant increases among boys and girls for leukaemia, and hepatic and germ-cell tumours, whereas for boys, incidence of neuroblastomas and malignant epithelial tumours has recently decreased. For all cancers and for both sexes combined, there was a consistent increase (0.7% per year, 1983-2006) at age 0-4 years, a slight non-significant increase at 5-9 years, and at 10-14 years, an initial increase (2.7% per year, 1983-1996) followed by a slight non-significant decrease.Conclusion:Although there is some evidence of a recent plateau in cancer incidence rates in Australia for boys and older children, interpretation is difficult without a better understanding of what underlies the changes reported. © 2010 Cancer Research UK.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)620-626
    Number of pages6
    JournalBritish Journal of Cancer
    Volume102
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Feb 2010

    Keywords

    • Cancer incidence
    • Childhood
    • Leukaemia
    • Lymphoma
    • Paediatric
    • Trends

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