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Whole-population trends in pathology-confirmed cancer incidence in Northern Ireland,Scotland and Wales during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic: A retrospective observational study
Institution:1. Welsh Cancer Intelligence & Surveillance Unit, Public Health Wales Knowledge Directorate, Floor 5, Capital Quarter 2, Tyndall Street, Cardiff CF10 4BZ, UK;2. Scottish Cancer Registry, Public Health Scotland, Edinburgh, Gyle Square, 1 South Gyle Crescent, Edinburgh EH12 9EB, UK;3. Northern Ireland Cancer Registry, Centre for Public Health, School of Medicine, Dentistry and Biomedical Sciences, Queens University Belfast, Belfast UK;4. Patrick G Johnston Centre for Cancer Research, Queens University Belfast, Belfast UK;5. DATA-CAN, the UK''s Health Data Research Hub for Cancer, UK;6. South West Wales Cancer Centre, Swansea Bay University Health Board, Swansea SA2 8QA, UK
Abstract:IntroductionThe COVID-19 epidemic interrupted normal cancer diagnosis procedures. Population-based cancer registries report incidence at least 18 months after it happens. Our goal was to make more timely estimates by using pathologically confirmed cancers (PDC) as a proxy for incidence. We compared the 2020 and 2021 PDC with the 2019 pre-pandemic baseline in Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland (NI).MethodsNumbers of female breast (ICD-10 C50), lung (C33–34), colorectal (C18–20), gynaecological (C51–58), prostate (C61), head and neck (C00-C14, C30–32), upper gastro-intestinal (C15–16), urological (C64–68), malignant melanoma (C43), and non-melanoma skin (NMSC) (C44) cancers were counted. Multiple pairwise comparisons generated incidence rate ratios (IRR).ResultsData were accessible within 5 months of the pathological diagnosis date. Between 2019 and 2020, the number of pathologically confirmed malignancies (excluding NMSC) decreased by 7315 (14.1 %). Scotland experienced early monthly declines of up to 64 % (colorectal cancers, April 2020 versus April 2019). Wales experienced the greatest overall change in 2020, but Northern Ireland experienced the quickest recovery. The pandemic's effects varied by cancer type, with no significant change in lung cancer diagnoses in Wales in 2020 (IRR 0.97 (95 % CI 0.90–1.05)), followed by an increase in 2021 (IRR 1.11 (1.03–1.20).ConclusionPDC are useful in reporting cancer incidence quicker than cancer registrations. Temporal and geographical differences between participating countries mirrored differences in responses to the COVID-19 pandemic, indicating face validity and the potential for quick cancer diagnosis assessment. To verify their sensitivity and specificity against the gold standard of cancer registrations, however, additional research is required.
Keywords:COVID-19  Sars-CoV-2  Pandemic  Pathology-confirmed cancer  Population-based incidence
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