Gallbladder cancer: incidence and survival in a high-risk area of Chile.

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Gallbladder cancer: incidence and survival in a high-risk area of Chile. / Bertran, Enriqueta; Heise, Kirstin-Friederike; Andia, Marcelo E; Ferreccio, Catterina.

in: INT J CANCER, Jahrgang 127, Nr. 10, 10, 2010, S. 2446-2454.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Bertran, E, Heise, K-F, Andia, ME & Ferreccio, C 2010, 'Gallbladder cancer: incidence and survival in a high-risk area of Chile.', INT J CANCER, Jg. 127, Nr. 10, 10, S. 2446-2454. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20473911?dopt=Citation>

APA

Vancouver

Bertran E, Heise K-F, Andia ME, Ferreccio C. Gallbladder cancer: incidence and survival in a high-risk area of Chile. INT J CANCER. 2010;127(10):2446-2454. 10.

Bibtex

@article{ffd21631e01e4e9b9f7c728852a5e443,
title = "Gallbladder cancer: incidence and survival in a high-risk area of Chile.",
abstract = "We assessed population incidence rates 1998-2002 and 5-year survival rates of 317 primary gallbladder cancer (GBC) entered in the population-based cancer registry in Valdivia. We analyzed GBC incidence (Poisson regression) and GBC survival (Cox regression). Cases were identified by histology (69.4%), clinical work-up (21.8%), or death certificate only (8.8%). Main symptoms were abdominal pain (82.8%), jaundice (53.6%) nausea (42.6%), and weight loss (38.2%); at diagnosis, 64% had Stage TNM IV. In the period, 4% of histopathological studies from presumptively benign cholecystectomies presented GBC. GBC cases were mainly females (76.0%), urban residents (70.3%), Hispanic (83.7%) of low schooling 8 years of schooling. Low schooling, female and urban residence were independent risk factors. By December 31, 2007, 6 (1.9%) cases were living, 280 (88.3%) died from GBC, 32 (10.1%) were lost of follow-up. Kaplan Meier Global 5-year survival was: 10.3%, 85% at stage I and 1.9% at stage IV; median survival: 3.4 months. Independent poor prognostic factors were TNM IV, jaundice and nonincidental diagnoses. Our results suggest that women of Mapuche ancestry with low schooling (>50 years) are at the highest risk of presenting and dying from GBC and should be the target for early detection programs.",
author = "Enriqueta Bertran and Kirstin-Friederike Heise and Andia, {Marcelo E} and Catterina Ferreccio",
year = "2010",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "127",
pages = "2446--2454",
journal = "INT J CANCER",
issn = "0020-7136",
publisher = "Wiley-Liss Inc.",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Gallbladder cancer: incidence and survival in a high-risk area of Chile.

AU - Bertran, Enriqueta

AU - Heise, Kirstin-Friederike

AU - Andia, Marcelo E

AU - Ferreccio, Catterina

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - We assessed population incidence rates 1998-2002 and 5-year survival rates of 317 primary gallbladder cancer (GBC) entered in the population-based cancer registry in Valdivia. We analyzed GBC incidence (Poisson regression) and GBC survival (Cox regression). Cases were identified by histology (69.4%), clinical work-up (21.8%), or death certificate only (8.8%). Main symptoms were abdominal pain (82.8%), jaundice (53.6%) nausea (42.6%), and weight loss (38.2%); at diagnosis, 64% had Stage TNM IV. In the period, 4% of histopathological studies from presumptively benign cholecystectomies presented GBC. GBC cases were mainly females (76.0%), urban residents (70.3%), Hispanic (83.7%) of low schooling 8 years of schooling. Low schooling, female and urban residence were independent risk factors. By December 31, 2007, 6 (1.9%) cases were living, 280 (88.3%) died from GBC, 32 (10.1%) were lost of follow-up. Kaplan Meier Global 5-year survival was: 10.3%, 85% at stage I and 1.9% at stage IV; median survival: 3.4 months. Independent poor prognostic factors were TNM IV, jaundice and nonincidental diagnoses. Our results suggest that women of Mapuche ancestry with low schooling (>50 years) are at the highest risk of presenting and dying from GBC and should be the target for early detection programs.

AB - We assessed population incidence rates 1998-2002 and 5-year survival rates of 317 primary gallbladder cancer (GBC) entered in the population-based cancer registry in Valdivia. We analyzed GBC incidence (Poisson regression) and GBC survival (Cox regression). Cases were identified by histology (69.4%), clinical work-up (21.8%), or death certificate only (8.8%). Main symptoms were abdominal pain (82.8%), jaundice (53.6%) nausea (42.6%), and weight loss (38.2%); at diagnosis, 64% had Stage TNM IV. In the period, 4% of histopathological studies from presumptively benign cholecystectomies presented GBC. GBC cases were mainly females (76.0%), urban residents (70.3%), Hispanic (83.7%) of low schooling 8 years of schooling. Low schooling, female and urban residence were independent risk factors. By December 31, 2007, 6 (1.9%) cases were living, 280 (88.3%) died from GBC, 32 (10.1%) were lost of follow-up. Kaplan Meier Global 5-year survival was: 10.3%, 85% at stage I and 1.9% at stage IV; median survival: 3.4 months. Independent poor prognostic factors were TNM IV, jaundice and nonincidental diagnoses. Our results suggest that women of Mapuche ancestry with low schooling (>50 years) are at the highest risk of presenting and dying from GBC and should be the target for early detection programs.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 127

SP - 2446

EP - 2454

JO - INT J CANCER

JF - INT J CANCER

SN - 0020-7136

IS - 10

M1 - 10

ER -