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. 2014 Aug;134(2):309-13.
doi: 10.1016/j.ygyno.2014.05.011. Epub 2014 May 27.

Younger age distribution of cervical cancer incidence among survivors of pediatric and young adult cancers

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Younger age distribution of cervical cancer incidence among survivors of pediatric and young adult cancers

Rohit P Ojha et al. Gynecol Oncol. 2014 Aug.

Abstract

Background: Pediatric and young adult (PAYA) cancer survivors may have an earlier onset of chronic diseases compared with the general population. We compared the age at cervical cancer diagnosis between PAYA cancer survivors and females in the general US population.

Methods: We used longitudinal data from 9 population-based registries of the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results program collected between 1973 and 2010. PAYA cancer survivors were females diagnosed with any cancer before age 30 years, survived at least 5 years post-diagnosis, and were subsequently diagnosed with invasive cervical cancer (n=46). The general US population comprised females who were diagnosed with invasive cervical cancer as the primary malignancy (n=26,956). We estimated the difference in median age at diagnosis (ß₅₀) and bootstrap 95% confidence limits (CL) of invasive cervical cancer after adjustment for year of diagnosis and race.

Results: The median age at diagnosis of invasive cervical cancer was 33 years for female PAYA cancer survivors and 40 years for females in the general US population (ß50=-7.0, 95% CL: -11, -3.2). Similar differences were observed across subgroups of stage and histologic subtype of invasive cervical cancer.

Conclusion: Our results suggest that PAYA cancer survivors are diagnosed with invasive cervical cancer at a substantially younger age compared with females without a prior cancer diagnosis in the general US population. This issue warrants further study, and could have implications for determining age at initiation or frequency of cervical cancer screening if younger age at diagnosis is attributable to an underlying biological phenomenon.

Keywords: Adolescent and young adult cancer; Aging; Cervical cancer; Pediatric cancer; Survivorship.

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