• Lutte contre les cancers

  • Observation

Has there been progress in cancer care in Croatia? Assessing outcomes in a partially complete mortality follow-up setting

A partir des données des registres croates du cancer, cette étude évalue la qualité des soins et la l’évolution de la mortalité des patients atteints de cancer

We examine the possibility of assessing progress in cancer care with partially complete mortality follow-up information, and report outcomes from Croatia. Follow-up based on death certificates indicating cancer as the cause of death was available from the Croatian National Cancer Registry. The effect of partially complete follow-up was first examined with data from the Saarland Cancer Registry by comparing absolute, relative, and cancer death certificate based survival estimates. Survival changes between 2000 and 2006 are reported for 21 common cancers amongst patients aged 15–49 and 50–59 in Croatia. Survival estimates based on cancer death specific follow-up could well approximate absolute and relative survival for patients aged 15–49, and relative survival for patients aged 50–59: overestimation by more than one standard error occurred 1 and 2 and 5 times, respectively, amongst 21 cancers. In Croatia, significant survival increases occurred for patients aged 15–59 with colorectal and breast cancers, patients aged 15–49 with thyroid cancer and patients aged 50–59 with malignant melanoma and prostate cancer. Outcome evaluation is limited with partially complete follow-up information. Internationally comparable cancer information continues to lack from South-Eastern Europe, and the provision thereof remains a highly important public health task.

http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0959804911003728?showall=true 2011

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