Increasing incidence of differentiated thyroid cancer in the United States, 1988–2005
American Cancer Society · Emory University
Abstract
Studies have reported an increasing incidence of thyroid cancer since 1980. One possible explanation for this trend is increased detection through more widespread and aggressive use of ultrasound and image-guided biopsy. Increases resulting from increased detection are most likely to involve small primary tumors rather than larger tumors, which often present as palpable thyroid masses. The objective of the current study was to investigate the trends in increasing incidence of differentiated (papillary and follicular) thyroid cancer by size, age, race, and sex.
Cases of differentiated thyroid cancer (1988-2005) were analyzed using the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) dataset. Trends in incidence rates of papillary and follicular cancer, race, age, sex, primary tumor size (4 cm), and SEER stage (localized, regional, distant) were analyzed using joinpoint regression and reported as the annual percentage change (APC).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 31.52
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 12
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Thyroid cancer
- Incidence (geometry)
- Cancer
- Papillary thyroid cancer
- Thyroid
- Epidemiology
- Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results
- Good health and well-being