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Journal ArticleDOI

Thyroid cancer mortality and incidence: A global overview

TLDR
The declines in thyroid cancer mortality reflect both variations in risk factor exposure and changes in the diagnosis and treatment of the disease, while the increases in the incidence are likely due to the increase in the detection of this neoplasm over the last few decades.
Abstract
In most areas of the world, thyroid cancer incidence has been appreciably increasing over the last few decades, whereas mortality has steadily declined. We updated global trends in thyroid cancer mortality and incidence using official mortality data from the World Health Organization (1970-2012) and incidence data from the Cancer Incidence in Five Continents (1960-2007). Male mortality declined in all the major countries considered, with annual percent changes around -2/-3% over the last decades. Only in the United States mortality declined up to the mid 1980s and increased thereafter. Similarly, in women mortality declined in most countries considered, with APCs around -2/-5% over the last decades, with the exception of the UK, the United States and Australia, where mortality has been declining up to the late 1980s/late 1990s to level off (or increase) thereafter. In 2008-2012, most countries had mortality rates (age-standardized, world population) between 0.20 and 0.40/100,000 men and 0.20 and 0.60/100,000 women, the highest rates being in Latvia, Hungary, the Republic of Moldova and Israel (over 0.40/100,000) for men and in Ecuador, Colombia and Israel (over 0.60/100,000) for women. In most countries, a steady increase in the incidence of thyroid cancer (mainly papillary carcinomas) was observed in both sexes. The declines in thyroid cancer mortality reflect both variations in risk factor exposure and changes in the diagnosis and treatment of the disease, while the increases in the incidence are likely due to the increase in the detection of this neoplasm over the last few decades.

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Guía clínica para el manejo de pacientes con carcinoma diferenciado de tiroides de bajo riesgo

TL;DR: Esta guia clinica proporciona recomendaciones del grupo de trabajo de cancer de tiroides de the Sociedad Espanola de Endocrinologia y Nutricion orientadas al enfoque y gestion razonable y apropiada de los pacientes con cancer of tiroide de bajo riesgo.
Journal ArticleDOI

Association of thyroid cancer risk with plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D and vitamin D binding protein: a case-control study in China.

TL;DR: It is suggested that 25(OH)D and DBP had protective effects against thyroid cancer, but the negative association between TC andDBP might be modified by 25( OH) D and physical activity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Does relatively low iodine intake contribute to thyroid cancer? An ecological comparison of epidemiology.

TL;DR: Emerging evidence is provided for the association between iodine intake and TC risk in a Chinese population and the incidence of TC in Daishan County is higher than the other three counties of Zhoushan.
Journal ArticleDOI

Papillary thyroid carcinoma is a risk factor for severe osteoporosis.

TL;DR: PTC was identified as a risk factor for severe osteoporosis, independent of BMI, renal function and glucose profile, in patients with PTC and healthy individuals.
Journal ArticleDOI

IL-17A increases MHC class I expression and promotes T cell activation in papillary thyroid cancer patients with coexistent Hashimoto’s thyroiditis

TL;DR: Papillary thyroid cancer with coexisting Hashimoto’s thyroiditis presents elevated MHC class I expression, which may be the result of IL-17A secretion, and T cell activation is enhanced in vitro by IL- 17A and may provide future utility in PTC immunotherapy.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Estimates of worldwide burden of cancer in 2008: GLOBOCAN 2008.

TL;DR: The results for 20 world regions are presented, summarizing the global patterns for the eight most common cancers, and striking differences in the patterns of cancer from region to region are observed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cancer statistics, 2014

TL;DR: The magnitude of the decline in cancer death rates from 1991 to 2010 varies substantially by age, race, and sex, ranging from no decline among white women aged 80 years and older to a 55% decline among black men aged 40 years to 49 years.
Journal ArticleDOI

Projecting Cancer Incidence and Deaths to 2030: The Unexpected Burden of Thyroid, Liver, and Pancreas Cancers in the United States

TL;DR: Pancreas and liver cancers are projected to surpass breast, prostate, and colorectal cancers to become the second and third leading causes of cancer-related death by 2030, respectively.
Book

The Causes of Cancer: Quantitative Estimates of Avoidable Risks of Cancer in the United States Today

TL;DR: Evidence that the various common types of cancer are largely avoidable diseases is reviewed, and it is suggested that, apart from cancer of the respiratory tract, the types of cancers that are currently common are not peculiarly modern diseases and are likely to depend chiefly on some long-established factor.
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