Abstract

Cancer is disease of aging that disproportionately affects older adults and often results in considerable public health consequences. This study evaluated gender-age-specific cancer mortality risk factors in older adults in Switzerland with attention to the most common types of cancer. The population included all individuals ≥65 years old based on 1990/2000 censuses linked to mortality records through end of 2008. Cancer mortality relative risk was assessed by gender-age-specific all-cancer and cancer-specific mortality hazard ratios (HR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) from adjusted Cox proportional hazards regression models. The risk profile of dying from cancer was similar in older men and women across most socio-demographic characteristics: higher cancer mortality risk with lower educational attainment (all-cancer men HR = 0.84 [95%CI 0.82, 0.85] tertiary, HR = 1.09 [95%CI 1.07, 1.10] compulsory, women all-cancer HR = 0.95 [95%CI 0.92, 0.98] tertiary, HR = 1.03 [95%CI 1.02, 1.05] compulsory) and unmarried marital status. Cancer mortality risk factors varied less than hypothesised across older age-groups. However, for outcomes and characteristics with age-specific variation the oldest (≥85 years) generally showed the lower cancer mortality relative risk (except for non-Swiss lung cancer risk). These comprehensive epidemiological results indicate that in Switzerland (like other developed countries) age alone is not the only important cancer risk factor and risk is not necessarily the same across older age-groups; providing additional needed information about the aging-cancer nexus. However, additional studies especially with consideration of stage of disease, treatments received and comorbidity are needed.

Highlights

  • The World Health Organization reports that cancer, second to cardiovascular disease, is the most important cause of morbidity (≥3 million new cases per year) and mortality (20% of all deaths, approximately 1.7 million cancer deaths per year) in Europe [1]

  • This study evaluated gender-age-specific cancer mortality risk factors in older adults in Switzerland with attention to the most common types of cancer

  • The population included all individuals ≥65 years old based on 1990/2000 censuses linked to mortality records through end of 2008

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Summary

Introduction

The World Health Organization reports that cancer, second (but only nearly) to cardiovascular disease, is the most important cause of morbidity (≥3 million new cases per year) and mortality (20% of all deaths, approximately 1.7 million cancer deaths per year) in Europe [1]. Over the last century there have been remarkable changes in the developed world’s population One hallmark of these changes is the rapid expansion of the older population with simultaneously low fertility rates. We cannot truly anticipate the changes that rapid population aging will bring, we can work to understand the epidemiologic patterns of aging, cancer, where they intersect, and their potential implications.

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