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. 2016 May 19;11(5):e0155849. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0155849

Fig 1. Kaplan-Meier plots for overall survival.

Fig 1

(A) Women at all ages diagnosed with cervical cancer (CC) before introduction of organised screening (2002–2005) vs women diagnosed after one screening round (2009–2012). (B) Women < 60 years of age diagnosed with CC before introduction of organised screening (2002–2005) vs women diagnosed after one screening round (2009–2012). (C) Women ≥ 60 years of age diagnosed with CC before introduction of organised screening (2002–2005) vs women diagnosed after one full screening round (2009–2012). (D) Women diagnosed with CC before introduction of organised screening and after one screening round according to age at diagnosis: < 60 years vs ≥ 60 years. (E) Women diagnosed with CC before introduction of organised screening and after one screening round according to histological type of CC: SCC vs ADC and other types. (F) Women diagnosed with CC before introduction of organised screening and after one screening round according to clinical stage of CC: early vs advanced. (G) Women < 60 years of age (women diagnosed with CC before introduction of organised screening and after one screening round) according to clinical stage of CC: early vs advanced. (H) Women ≥ 60 years of age (women diagnosed with CC before introduction of organised screening and after one screening round) according to clinical stage of CC: early vs advanced. CC, cervical cancer; SCC, squamous cell carcinoma; ADC, adenocarcinoma; other types include: one case of macrocellular carcinoma, two cases of adenosquamous carcinoma, one case of microcellular and macrocellular carcinoma each, one case of undetermined histological type; Early CC—FIGO (International Society of Gynaecology and Obstetrics 1994 staging system) I-IIa; Advanced CC—FIGO IIb-IV.