Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12105/7023
Title
Municipal distribution of ovarian cancer mortality in Spain
Author(s)
Lope Carvajal, Virginia ISCIII | Pollan-Santamaria, Marina ISCIII | Perez-Gomez, Beatriz ISCIII | Aragones, Nuria ISCIII | Vidal, Enric ISCIII | Gomez-Barroso, Diana ISCIII | Ramis, Rebeca ISCIII | García-Pérez, Javier ISCIII | Cabanes, Anna ISCIII | Lopez-Abente, Gonzalo ISCIII
Date issued
2008-09-12
Citation
BMC Cancer. 2008 Sep 12;8:258.
Language
Inglés
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Spain was the country that registered the greatest increases in ovarian cancer mortality in Europe. This study describes the municipal distribution of ovarian cancer mortality in Spain using spatial models for small-area analysis. METHODS: Smoothed relative risks of ovarian cancer mortality were obtained, using the Besag, York and Molliè autoregressive spatial model. Standardised mortality ratios, smoothed relative risks, and distribution of the posterior probability of relative risks being greater than 1 were depicted on municipal maps. RESULTS: During the study period (1989-1998), 13,869 ovarian cancer deaths were registered in 2,718 Spanish towns, accounting for 4% of all cancer-related deaths among women. The highest relative risks were mainly concentrated in three areas, i.e., the interior of Barcelona and Gerona (north-east Spain), the north of Lugo and Asturias (north-west Spain) and along the Seville-Huelva boundary (in the south-west). Eivissa (Balearic Islands) and El Hierro (Canary Islands) also registered increased risks. CONCLUSION: Well established ovarian cancer risk factors might not contribute significantly to the municipal distribution of ovarian cancer mortality. Environmental and occupational exposures possibly linked to this pattern and prevalent in specific regions, are discussed in this paper. Small-area geographical studies are effective instruments for detecting risk areas that may otherwise remain concealed on a more reduced scale.
MESH
Online version
DOI
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