Abstract

Simple SummaryAdolescents and young adults (AYAs, aged 15–39 years) with cancer form a distinct patient population within the oncology care setting that is often overlooked in favour of paediatric and older adult patients. As such, specific knowledge on AYAs and their distinct spectrum of cancers is limited. Worldwide, cancer is increasing and it is among the major causes of death among AYAs. Cancer prognosis among AYAs has also been shown to lag behind that of younger and older patients suffering from similar diseases. To address these problems, better understanding of AYA cancers is needed. This study aims to provide an overview of the specific cancer trends among AYAs and the changes that have occurred in the Netherlands since 1990 in terms of incidence, survival, and mortality. This information will provide a solid foundation from which to guide future studies upon, aimed at acquiring more detailed cancer knowledge within the AYA domain.Adolescent and young adult (AYA) cancer patients, aged 15–39 years at primary cancer diagnosis, form a distinct, understudied, and underserved group in cancer care. This study aimed to assess long-term trends in incidence, survival, and mortality of AYA cancer patients within the Netherlands. Data on all malignant AYA tumours diagnosed between 1990–2016 (n = 95,228) were obtained from the Netherlands Cancer Registry. European age-standardised incidence and mortality rates with average annual percentage change (AAPC) statistics and five-year relative survival rates were calculated. The overall cancer incidence increased from 54.6 to 70.3 per 100,000 person-years (AAPC: +1.37%) between 1990–2016, and increased for both sexes individually and for most cancer types. Five-year relative survival overall improved from 73.7% in 1990–1999 to 86.4% in 2010–2016 and improved for both sexes and most cancer types. Survival remained poor (<60%) for rhabdomyosarcoma, lung, stomach, liver, bladder, and pancreatic carcinomas, among others. Mortality rates among male AYAs overall declined from 10.8 to 6.6 (AAPC: −1.64%) and from 14.4 to 10.1 per 100,000 person-years (AAPC: −1.81%) for female AYAs since 1990. Mortality rates remained unchanged for male AYAs aged 20–24 and 25–29 years. In conclusion, over the past three decades, there has been a considerable increase in cancer incidence among AYAs in the Netherlands. Meanwhile, the survival improved and the mortality overall declined. Survival at five-years now well exceeds above 80%, but did not do so for all cancer types.

Highlights

  • Worldwide, adolescents and young adults (AYA) form a distinct, understudied, and underserved group within the oncology domain that is often overlooked [1,2,3,4]

  • This study provided a comprehensive overview of long-term trends in incidence, survival and mortality among all AYA cancer patients aged 15–39 years and diagnosed in the Netherlands from 1990 through 2016

  • Our analyses showed that observed mortality rates and declines over time were slightly higher among female AYAs, among those aged 30 years and above

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Summary

Introduction

Adolescents and young adults (AYA) form a distinct, understudied, and underserved group within the oncology domain that is often overlooked [1,2,3,4]. In the Netherlands care for children with cancer is centralised based on their age, 0–17 years at diagnosis, whereas patients 18 years or older are being treated in any hospital in the Netherlands and centralisation only takes place based on certain tumour types. In practice this distinction is less clear, as was illustrated by a recent.

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