Increasing Trends in Some Cancers in Older Americans: Fact or Artifact?

Author:

Davis Devra Lee1,Lilienfeld Abraham D.2,Gittelsohn Allan3,Scheckenbach Mary Ellen4

Affiliation:

1. Board on Environmental Studies and Toxicology National Research Council Washington, D.C., Department of Health Policy School of Hygiene and Public Health Johns Hopkins University Baltimore, Maryland

2. Department of Epidemiology Johns Hopkins University Baltimore, Maryland

3. Department of Biostatistics Johns Hopkins University Baltimore, Maryland

4. Board on Environmental Studies and Toxicology National Research Council Washington, D.C.

Abstract

In analyzing U. S. cancer mortality from 1933 to 1978, Doll and Peto speculated that recently recorded increases in mortality among those over age 64 were likely to be artifacts, reflecting deaths previously misattributed to such causes as nonspecific cancer, pneumonia, and senility and other ill-defined causes. We test this hypothesis by examining some age-specific, cause-specific mortality in persons 35 to 84 for the period of the 8-ICDA, 1968- 1978, which corresponds to the last eleven years of the period stu died by Doll and Peto. Our analysis reveals increasing trends in mortality from lung cancer, brain cancer and multiple myeloma in older whites and nonwhites along with increases in several poten tially miscoded causes of death from 1968 to 1978. Thus, these increasing cancers in the elderly cannot be explained solely as arti facts. Further studies of trends in site-specific cancer mortality should include age groups through at least age 85. Continued mon itoring of site-specific cancer mortality patterns, particularly among the elderly, remains crucial for developing preventive strategies to reduce cancers.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Toxicology

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