© 1999 by Oxford University Press
Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Vol. 91, No. 18, 1585A-1586,
September 15, 1999
© 1999 Oxford University Press
CORRESPONDENCE |
Re: Evaluating Gastric Cancer Misclassification: a Potential Explanation for the Rise in Cardia Cancer Incidence
Affiliations of authors: F. Levi, V.-C. Te, L. Randimbison, Registre Vaudois des Tumeurs, Institut universitaire de médecine sociale et préventive, Lausanne, Switzerland; C. La Vecchia, Istituto di Ricerche Farmacologiche "Mario Negri," and Istituto di Statistica Medica e Biometria, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milan, Italy.
Correspondence to: Fabio Levi, M.D., M.Sc., Registre vaudois des tumeurs, CHUV-Falaises 1, CH-1011 Lausanne, Switzerland (e-mail: fabio.levi{at}inst.hospvd.ch).
Increased incidence of adenocarcinoma of the gastric cardia has been reported over the last few decades from several areas of North America and Europe (1-2). A mortality study from the Swedish Cancer Registry, however, suggested that the observed upward trends can be, partly or largely, accounted for by changed accuracy of registration within gastric subsites (3).
We considered, therefore, trends in incidence rates for various gastric subsites in the Cancer Registry of the Swiss Canton of Vaud (covering approximately 600 000 inhabitants in 1990 from the French-speaking part of Switzerland) over the period from 1976 through 1997. In this area, uniform criteria of classification have been adopted, and traditional attention has been focused on careful endoscopic and histopathologic examination of gastric lesions (4-6).
Table 1
gives average age-adjusted (on the world standard
population) incidence rates for various subsites of gastric cancer during three separate calendar
periods. In both sexes, no appreciable change in incidence of adenocarcinoma of the gastric
cardia was observed (3.1 cases per 100 000 males, and 0.5 cases per 100 000
females from 1976 through 1979 versus 3.2 and 0.1, respectively, from 1995 through 1997),
while appreciable downward trends were observed for distal and other or unspecified gastric
cancer sites.
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These data, from a carefully surveyed European population, therefore do not support the existence of a systematic and major rise in incidence of cardiac adenocarcinomas (3,7), confirming thatin proportional termsthe cancers of the gastric cardia have become more frequent because of the decline of distal (and unspecified) gastric cancers.
REFERENCES
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3
Ekstrom AM, Signorello LB, Hansson LE, Bergstrom R,
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