Survival in Kidney and Bladder Cancers in Four Nordic Countries through a Half Century

Author:

Tichanek Filip12,Försti Asta34ORCID,Hemminki Akseli56ORCID,Hemminki Otto57,Hemminki Kari18ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Biomedical Center, Faculty of Medicine in Pilsen, Charles University, 30605 Pilsen, Czech Republic

2. Institute of Pathological Physiology, Faculty of Medicine in Pilsen, Charles University, 32300 Pilsen, Czech Republic

3. Hopp Children’s Cancer Center (KiTZ), 69120 Heidelberg, Germany

4. Division of Pediatric Neurooncology, German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), German Cancer Consortium (DKTK), 69120 Heidelberg, Germany

5. Cancer Gene Therapy Group, Translational Immunology Research Program, University of Helsinki, 00290 Helsinki, Finland

6. Comprehensive Cancer Center, Helsinki University Hospital, 00290 Helsinki, Finland

7. Department of Urology, Helsinki University Hospital, 00290 Helsinki, Finland

8. Division of Cancer Epidemiology, German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), Im Neuenheimer Feld 580, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany

Abstract

Kidney and bladder cancers share etiology and relatively good recent survival, but long-term studies are rare. We analyzed survival for these cancers in Denmark, Finland, Norway (NO), and Sweden (SE) over a 50-year period (1971–2020). Relative 1- and 5-year survival data were obtained from the NORDCAN database, and we additionally calculated conditional 5/1-year survival. In 2016–2020, 5-year survivals for male kidney (79.0%) and bladder (81.6%) cancers were best in SE. For female kidney cancer, NO survival reached 80.0%, and for bladder cancer, SE survival reached 76.1%. The magnitude of 5-year survival improvements during the 50-year period in kidney cancer was over 40% units; for bladder cancer, the improvement was over 20% units. Survival in bladder cancer was worse for women than for men, particularly in year 1. In both cancers, deaths in the first year were approximately as many as in the subsequent 4 years. We could document an impressive development for kidney cancer with tripled male and doubled female 5-year survival in 50 years. Additionally, for bladder cancer, a steady improvement was recorded. The current challenges are to curb early mortality and target treatment to reduce long-term mortality.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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