Cancer Research UK (2016) Cervical cancer incidence by age. Cancer Research UK, London Google Scholar Castle PE, Maza M (2016) Prophylactic HPV vaccination: past, present, and future. Epidemiol Infect 144(3):449–468 Article CAS PubMed Google Scholar Castle PE, Wacholder S, Lorincz AT, ...
To analyze trends in invasive cervical cancer incidence by age, histology, and race over a 35-year period (1973-2007) in order to gain insight into changes... O Adegoke,S Kulasingam,B Virnig - 《Journal of Womens Health》 被引量: 120发表: 2012年 A population-based study on the risk ...
We did a data modelling study that combined results from population modelling of incidence trends, observable data from the individual level with use of a generalised linear model, and microsimulation of unobservable disease states. We estimated age-specific absolute risks of cervical cancer in the ...
In the UK, cervical cancer is the14thmost common canceramong women of all ages, and the 2ndmost common cancer among women aged 15-44. There are around3,200new cases and850deaths every year. Around 50% of cervical cancer occurs under the age of 45, with the incidence rising from the ag...
As women born prior to 1984 would have been invited for screening from the age of 20 years, and those born in 1985 or after would not have been invited until age 25 years (in 2009), it is then of interest, that we compare cervical cancer incidence at ages 20–24 years in women ...
It is thought that the HPV vaccination programme will have a huge impact on the incidence of this cancer. A recent research study following over 1.5 million women in Sweden over an 11 year period after HPV vaccination, showed the risk dropped by 63% by the age of 30. ...
The estimated age-standardised incidence of cervical cancer was 13·1 per 100 000 women globally and varied widely among countries, with rates ranging from less than 2 to 75 per 100 000 women. Cervical cancer was the leading cause of cancer-related death in women in eastern, western, ...
作者: IMCMD Kok,MAVD Aa,MV Ballegooijen,S Siesling,HE Karim-Kos,FJV Kemenade,JWW Coebergh,on behalf of the Working Group Output of the Netherlands Cancer Registry 展开 摘要: We explored trends in incidence and mortality of cervical cancer by age, stage and morphology, and linked the ...
2 Inevitably it also leads to the early detection of some cancers (that it fails to prevent), which also has a benefit in reducing mortality from cervical cancer. In the UK, incidence of cervical cancer dropped by 24% since the introduction of a national screening programme in 1988.3 ...
With the creation of safe and efficacious vaccines to target human papillomavirus in the first decade of this century, WHO has an ambitious target to lower cervical cancer incidence (mostly caused by HPV) and mortality by 30% by 2030, meaning each countr