Decline in cervical cancer incidence and mortality in New South Wales in relation to control activities (Australia)

Background: To examine time trends in cervical cancer incidence and mortality in NSW women aged ≥20 years in relation to important health service initiatives and programs. Methods: Data on cervical cancer incidence and mortality were obtained from the NSW Central Cancer Registry for 1972-2001, and c...

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Published in:Cancer Causes & Control
Main Authors: Taylor, Richard, Morrell, Stephen, Mamoon, Hassan, Wain, Gerard, Ross, Jayne
Other Authors: G. Colditz
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Springer 2006
Subjects:
C1
Online Access:https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:79814
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spelling ftunivqespace:oai:espace.library.uq.edu.au:UQ:79814 2023-05-15T16:52:17+02:00 Decline in cervical cancer incidence and mortality in New South Wales in relation to control activities (Australia) Taylor, Richard Morrell, Stephen Mamoon, Hassan Wain, Gerard Ross, Jayne G. Colditz 2006-01-01 https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:79814 eng eng Springer doi:10.1007/s10552-005-0515-z issn:0957-5243 issn:1573-7225 Cervix Neoplasms Incidence Mortality Survival Time Factors Mass Screening Oncology Public Environmental & Occupational Health Screening-programs Invasive Cancer Trends Iceland Population Diagnosis England 321202 Epidemiology C1 730213 Preventive medicine Journal Article 2006 ftunivqespace https://doi.org/10.1007/s10552-005-0515-z 2020-08-04T03:41:09Z Background: To examine time trends in cervical cancer incidence and mortality in NSW women aged ≥20 years in relation to important health service initiatives and programs. Methods: Data on cervical cancer incidence and mortality were obtained from the NSW Central Cancer Registry for 1972-2001, and corresponding annual populations obtained from the Australian Bureau of Statistics. Direct age-standardised rates in the ≥20 year population were calculated using the 2001 NSW census population as standard. Proportional reductions in incidence and mortality since 1972-1974 were also calculated and related to key health service factors and to published NSW 5-year cervical cancer relative survival for similar periods. Results: Declines in cervical cancer incidence (-10%) and mortality (-20%), and increased degree-of-spread specific survival following the introduction of universal health care in 1975 suggest effects of greater access to Pap screening, earlier access to diagnosis and treatment services, and improved effectiveness of treatment. Incidence plateaued during the 1980s, but mortality fell further (-7%) due to an increased proportion of localised cancers (without change to degree-of-spread specific survival). The 1980s mortality reduction was a consequence of earlier diagnosis and/or secondary prevention, not improved treatment effectiveness or reduced incidence. A marked and sustained incidence decline to 2001 (-35%) occurred after the introduction of the NSW Cervical Screening Program in 1992. This was followed 3 years later by a sustained mortality decline (-20%). During the 1990s survival across all degrees of spread remained unchanged and the mortality reduction was due entirely to reduction in incidence. Conclusions: The substantial reduction of cervical cancer incidence and mortality in NSW over the last 3 decades is associated with important health service interventions that relate to control of cervical cancer, particularly the implementation of a population-based organised cervical screening program. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland The University of Queensland: UQ eSpace Cancer Causes & Control 17 3 299 306
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Queensland: UQ eSpace
op_collection_id ftunivqespace
language English
topic Cervix Neoplasms
Incidence
Mortality
Survival
Time Factors
Mass Screening
Oncology
Public
Environmental & Occupational Health
Screening-programs
Invasive Cancer
Trends
Iceland
Population
Diagnosis
England
321202 Epidemiology
C1
730213 Preventive medicine
spellingShingle Cervix Neoplasms
Incidence
Mortality
Survival
Time Factors
Mass Screening
Oncology
Public
Environmental & Occupational Health
Screening-programs
Invasive Cancer
Trends
Iceland
Population
Diagnosis
England
321202 Epidemiology
C1
730213 Preventive medicine
Taylor, Richard
Morrell, Stephen
Mamoon, Hassan
Wain, Gerard
Ross, Jayne
Decline in cervical cancer incidence and mortality in New South Wales in relation to control activities (Australia)
topic_facet Cervix Neoplasms
Incidence
Mortality
Survival
Time Factors
Mass Screening
Oncology
Public
Environmental & Occupational Health
Screening-programs
Invasive Cancer
Trends
Iceland
Population
Diagnosis
England
321202 Epidemiology
C1
730213 Preventive medicine
description Background: To examine time trends in cervical cancer incidence and mortality in NSW women aged ≥20 years in relation to important health service initiatives and programs. Methods: Data on cervical cancer incidence and mortality were obtained from the NSW Central Cancer Registry for 1972-2001, and corresponding annual populations obtained from the Australian Bureau of Statistics. Direct age-standardised rates in the ≥20 year population were calculated using the 2001 NSW census population as standard. Proportional reductions in incidence and mortality since 1972-1974 were also calculated and related to key health service factors and to published NSW 5-year cervical cancer relative survival for similar periods. Results: Declines in cervical cancer incidence (-10%) and mortality (-20%), and increased degree-of-spread specific survival following the introduction of universal health care in 1975 suggest effects of greater access to Pap screening, earlier access to diagnosis and treatment services, and improved effectiveness of treatment. Incidence plateaued during the 1980s, but mortality fell further (-7%) due to an increased proportion of localised cancers (without change to degree-of-spread specific survival). The 1980s mortality reduction was a consequence of earlier diagnosis and/or secondary prevention, not improved treatment effectiveness or reduced incidence. A marked and sustained incidence decline to 2001 (-35%) occurred after the introduction of the NSW Cervical Screening Program in 1992. This was followed 3 years later by a sustained mortality decline (-20%). During the 1990s survival across all degrees of spread remained unchanged and the mortality reduction was due entirely to reduction in incidence. Conclusions: The substantial reduction of cervical cancer incidence and mortality in NSW over the last 3 decades is associated with important health service interventions that relate to control of cervical cancer, particularly the implementation of a population-based organised cervical screening program.
author2 G. Colditz
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Taylor, Richard
Morrell, Stephen
Mamoon, Hassan
Wain, Gerard
Ross, Jayne
author_facet Taylor, Richard
Morrell, Stephen
Mamoon, Hassan
Wain, Gerard
Ross, Jayne
author_sort Taylor, Richard
title Decline in cervical cancer incidence and mortality in New South Wales in relation to control activities (Australia)
title_short Decline in cervical cancer incidence and mortality in New South Wales in relation to control activities (Australia)
title_full Decline in cervical cancer incidence and mortality in New South Wales in relation to control activities (Australia)
title_fullStr Decline in cervical cancer incidence and mortality in New South Wales in relation to control activities (Australia)
title_full_unstemmed Decline in cervical cancer incidence and mortality in New South Wales in relation to control activities (Australia)
title_sort decline in cervical cancer incidence and mortality in new south wales in relation to control activities (australia)
publisher Springer
publishDate 2006
url https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:79814
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation doi:10.1007/s10552-005-0515-z
issn:0957-5243
issn:1573-7225
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1007/s10552-005-0515-z
container_title Cancer Causes & Control
container_volume 17
container_issue 3
container_start_page 299
op_container_end_page 306
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