Cancer Epidemiology
Volume 36, Issue 1 , Pages 11-15, February 2012

Time trends in testicular cancer in Croatia 1983–2007: Rapid increases in incidence, no declines in mortality

  • Nino Sincic

      Affiliations

    • Laboratory for Epigenetics and Molecular Medicine, Department of Medical Biology, University of Zagreb Medical School, Zagreb, Croatia
  • ,
  • Tomislav Kulis

      Affiliations

    • Department of Urology, University Hospital Centre Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia
  • ,
  • Ariana Znaor

      Affiliations

    • Croatian National Cancer Registry, Croatian National Institute of Public Health, Zagreb, Croatia
    • Andrija Stampar School of Public Health, University of Zagreb Medical School, Zagreb, Croatia
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author at: Croatian National Cancer Registry, Rockefellerova 7, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia. Tel.: +385 1 486 32 80; fax: +385 1 486 32 71.
  • ,
  • Freddie Bray

      Affiliations

    • Section of Cancer Information, International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon, France

Received 14 April 2011; received in revised form 22 September 2011; accepted 27 September 2011. published online 10 October 2011.

Abstract 

Testicular cancer, although a rare malignancy, represents the most common cancer in young male populations of Western origin. While increasing incidence trends of testicular cancer have been reported, mortality is declining in many high-resource settings. Using national data from the Croatian National Cancer Registry for the period 1983–2007, time trends were analysed by joinpoint regression and Age–Period–Cohort models. The present study is the first to analyse the testicular cancer trends in the Croatian population. Over the 25-year period, a mean number of 89 incident cases and 13 deaths were reported annually. The observed mean annual increases in age-standardised rates were 7.0% for incidence and 1.6% for mortality, with no abrupt linear changes (joinpoints) identified. The incidence rates of testicular cancer incidence have been steeply increasing in successive cohorts born since the mid-1930s. The rapid rise in testicular cancer incidence in the Croatian population appears to be one of the highest rates of increase recorded in Europe and worldwide. The lack of decline in the mortality rates over time, while based on relatively few deaths, highlights a need for improvements in diagnostics and management of therapy in Croatia in order to improve the survival and quality-of-life of testicular cancer patients.

Abbreviations: APC, age–period–cohort, EAPC, estimated annual percent change

Keywords: Testicular cancer, Incidence, Mortality, Time trends, Croatia

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PII: S1877-7821(11)00151-2

doi:10.1016/j.canep.2011.09.010

Cancer Epidemiology
Volume 36, Issue 1 , Pages 11-15, February 2012