INTERNATIONAL
JOURNAL OF CANCER Volume 97, Issue 1, 2002. Pages: 72-81
Epidemiology Estimates of the world-wide prevalence of
cancer for 25 sites in the adult population
Paola Pisani *
Freddie Bray, D. Maxwell Parkin Unit of Descriptive Epidemiology, International
Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon, France
email: Paola Pisani (pisani@iarc.fr)
*Correspondence to Paola
Pisani, Unit of Descriptive Epidemiology, International Agency for Research on
Cancer, 150 cours Albert Thomas, 69372 Lyon Cedex 08, France Fax:
+33-472-73-86-50
Abstract
In health services planning, in addition to the basic measures of disease
occurrence incidence and mortality, other indexes expressing the demand of care
are also required to develop strategies for service provision. One of these is
prevalence of the disease, which measures the absolute number, and relative
proportion in the population, of individuals affected by the disease and
that require some form of medical attention. For most cancer sites, cases
surviving 5 years from diagnosis experience thereafter the same survival as the
general population, so most of the workload is therefore due to medical acts
within these first 5 years.
This article reports world-wide estimates of 1-, 2-3- and 4-5-year point
prevalence in 1990 in the population aged 15 years or over, and hence describes
the number of cancer cases diagnosed between 1986 and 1990 who were still alive
at the end of 1990. These estimates of prevalence at 1, 2-3 and 4-5 years are
applicable to the evaluation of initial treatment, clinical follow-up and point
of cure, respectively, for the majority of cancers. We describe the
computational procedure and data sources utilised to obtain these figures and
compare them with data published by 2 cancer registries.
The highest prevalence of cancer is in North America with 1.5% of the
population affected and diagnosed in the previous 5 years (about 0.5% of
the population in years 4-5 and 2-3 of follow-up and 0.4% within the first year
of diagnosis). This corresponds to over 3.2 million individuals. Western Europe
and Australia and New Zealand show very similar percentages with 1.2% and 1.1%
of the population affected (about 3.9 and 0.2 million cases respectively). Japan
and Eastern Europe form the next batch with 1.0% and 0.7%, followed by Latin
America and the Caribbean (overall prevalence of 0.4%), and all remaining
regions are around 0.2%.
Cancer prevalence in developed countries is very similar in men and women, 1.1%
of the sex-specific population, while in developing countries the prevalence is
some 25% greater in women than men, reflecting a preponderance of cancer sites
with poor survival such as liver, oesophagus and stomach in males. The
magnitude of disease incidence is the primary determinant of crude prevalence
of cases diagnosed within 1 year so that differences by region mainly reflect
variation in risk. In the long-term period however different demographic
patterns with long-life expectancy in high-income countries determine a higher
prevalence in these areas even for relatively uncommon cancer sites such as the
cervix.
© 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Received: 20 February 2001; Revised: 8 June 2001; Accepted: 22 June 2001