Affiliation:
1. Division of International Epidemiology and Population Studies, Fogarty International Center, National Institutes of Health
2. PandemiX Center, Dept of Science & Environment, Roskilde University
3. Brotman Baty Institute, University of Washington
Abstract
Cancer is considered a risk factor for COVID-19 mortality, yet several countries have reported that deaths with a primary code of cancer remained within historic levels during the COVID-19 pandemic. Here, we further elucidate the relationship between cancer mortality and COVID-19 on a population level in the US. We compared pandemic-related mortality patterns from underlying and multiple cause (MC) death data for six types of cancer, diabetes, and Alzheimer’s. Any pandemic-related changes in coding practices should be eliminated by study of MC data. Nationally in 2020, MC cancer mortality rose by only 3% over a pre-pandemic baseline, corresponding to ~13,600 excess deaths. Mortality elevation was measurably higher for less deadly cancers (breast, colorectal, and hematological, 2–7%) than cancers with a poor survival rate (lung and pancreatic, 0–1%). In comparison, there was substantial elevation in MC deaths from diabetes (37%) and Alzheimer’s (19%). To understand these differences, we simulated the expected excess mortality for each condition using COVID-19 attack rates, life expectancy, population size, and mean age of individuals living with each condition. We find that the observed mortality differences are primarily explained by differences in life expectancy, with the risk of death from deadly cancers outcompeting the risk of death from COVID-19.
Funder
Carlsberg Foundation
Danish National Research Foundation
Publisher
eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd
Reference51 articles.
1. A comprehensive analysis of all-cause and cause-specific excess deaths in 30 countries during 2020;Alicandro;European Journal of Epidemiology,2023
2. Chronic disease indicators. Diabetes among adults;CDC, Division of Population Health,2022
3. Weekly united states COVID-19 cases and deaths by state - ARCHIVED;Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,2022
4. COVID-19 serology surveillance;Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,2023
5. Evaluation of COVID-19 mortality and adverse outcomes in US patients with or without cancer;Chavez-MacGregor;JAMA Oncology,2022