Lewis Denise Riedel, Check David P, Caporaso Neil E, Travis William D, Devesa Susan S
Surveillance Research Program, Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland.
Cancer. 2014 Sep 15;120(18):2883-92. doi: 10.1002/cncr.28749. Epub 2014 Aug 11.
Lung cancer incidence rates overall are declining in the United States. This study investigated the trends by histologic type and demographic characteristics.
Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) program rates of microscopically confirmed lung cancer overall and squamous cell, small cell, adenocarcinoma, large cell, other, and unspecified carcinomas among US whites and blacks diagnosed from 1977 to 2010 and white non-Hispanics, Asian/Pacific Islanders, and white Hispanics diagnosed from 1992 to 2010 were analyzed by sex and age.
Squamous and small cell carcinoma rates declined since the 1990s, although less rapidly among females than males. Adenocarcinoma rates decreased among males and only through 2005, after which they then rose during 2006 to 2010 among every racial/ethnic/sex group; rates for unspecified type declined. Male/female rate ratios declined among whites and blacks more than among other groups. Recent rates among young females were higher than among males for adenocarcinoma among all racial/ethnic groups and for other specified carcinomas among whites.
US lung cancer trends vary by sex, histologic type, racial/ethnic group, and age, reflecting historical cigarette smoking rates, duration, cessation, cigarette composition, and exposure to other carcinogens. Substantial excesses among males have diminished and higher rates of adenocarcinoma among young females have emerged as rates among males declined more rapidly. The recognition of EGFR mutation and ALK rearrangements that occur primarily in adenocarcinomas are the primary basis for the molecular revolution that has transformed lung cancer diagnosis and treatment over the past decade, and these changes have affected recent type-specific trends.
美国肺癌总体发病率正在下降。本研究调查了按组织学类型和人口统计学特征划分的发病趋势。
分析了监测、流行病学和最终结果(SEER)项目中1977年至2010年诊断的美国白人和黑人以及1992年至2010年诊断的非西班牙裔白人、亚太岛民和西班牙裔白人中经显微镜确诊的总体肺癌以及鳞状细胞癌、小细胞癌、腺癌、大细胞癌、其他癌和未明确类型癌的发病率,并按性别和年龄进行分析。
自20世纪90年代以来,鳞状细胞癌和小细胞癌发病率下降,尽管女性下降速度低于男性。男性腺癌发病率下降,且仅在2005年前下降,此后在2006年至2010年期间,各种族/族裔/性别组的发病率均上升;未明确类型的发病率下降。白人和黑人的男女发病率比下降幅度大于其他群体。在所有种族/族裔群体中,年轻女性腺癌的近期发病率高于男性,在白人中,其他特定类型癌的情况也是如此。
美国肺癌发病趋势因性别、组织学类型、种族/族裔群体和年龄而异,反映了历史吸烟率、持续时间、戒烟情况、香烟成分以及接触其他致癌物的情况。男性中大量的超额发病率已减少,随着男性发病率下降更快,年轻女性中腺癌发病率升高。表皮生长因子受体(EGFR)突变和间变性淋巴瘤激酶(ALK)重排主要发生在腺癌中,对这些突变的认识是过去十年改变肺癌诊断和治疗的分子革命的主要基础,这些变化影响了近期特定类型的发病趋势。