%0 Journal Article
%A Tichanek, Filip
%A Försti, Asta
%A Liska, Vaclv
%A Hemminki, Otto
%A Koskinen, Anni
%A Hemminki, Akseli
%A Hemminki, Kari
%T Early mortality critically impedes improvements in thyroid cancer survival through a half century.
%J European journal of endocrinology
%V 189
%N 3
%@ 0001-5598
%C Bristol
%I BioScientifica Ltd.
%M DKFZ-2023-01827
%P 355 - 362
%D 2023
%Z #LA:C020#
%X We analyze survival in thyroid cancer from Denmark (DK), Finland (FI), Norway (NO), and Sweden (SE) over a 50-year period (1971-2020), and additionally consider concomitant changes in incidence and mortality.Population-based survival study.Relative 1-, 5/1 (conditional)-, and 5-year survival data were obtained from the NORDCAN database for years 1971-2020. Incidence and mortality rates were also assessed.A novel consistent observation was that 1-year survival was worse than 5/1-year survival but the difference between these decreased with time. Relative 1-year survival in thyroid cancer (mean for the 4 countries) reached 92.7
%K Female
%K Humans
%K Male
%K Thyroid Neoplasms: diagnosis
%K Thyroid Neoplasms: epidemiology
%K Databases, Factual
%K Finland: epidemiology
%K Norway: epidemiology
%K anaplastic cancer (Other)
%K diagnostics (Other)
%K relative survival (Other)
%K treatment (Other)
%F PUB:(DE-HGF)16
%9 Journal Article
%$ pmid:37675794
%R 10.1093/ejendo/lvad117
%U https://inrepo02.dkfz.de/record/282681