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Canadian Journal of Public Health = Revue Canadienne de Santé Publique logoLink to Canadian Journal of Public Health = Revue Canadienne de Santé Publique
. 2007 Jan 1;98(1):60–64. doi: 10.1007/BF03405387

The Changing Age Distribution of Prostate Cancer in Canada

C Ineke Neutel 113,213, Ru-Nie Gao 113,, Paul A Blood 313, Leslie A Gaudette 113
PMCID: PMC6976190  PMID: 17278680

Abstract

Background

Prostate cancer incidence rates are still increasing steadily; mortality rates are levelling, possibly decreasing; and hospitalization rates for many diagnoses are decreasing. Our objective is to examine changes in age distributions of prostate cancer during these times of change.

Methods

Prostate cancer cases were derived from the Canadian Cancer Registry, prostate cancer deaths from Vital Statistics, hospitalizations from the Hospital Morbidity File. Agestandardized rates were calculated based on the 1991 Canadian population. A prevalence correction for incidence rates was calculated.

Results

Age-specific incidence rates increased until 1995 for all ages, but a superimposed peak (1991–94) was greatest between ages 60–79. After 1995, increases in incidence continued for the under-70 age groups. Prevalence correction indicated the greatest underestimation of incidence rates for the oldest ages, but was less in Canada than in the United States. Mortality rates increased until 1994, then levelled and slowly decreased; age-specific mortality rates showed the greatest increase for the oldest ages but the earliest downturn for younger age groups. While hospitalizations dropped drastically after 1991, this drop was confined to elderly men (70+).

Conclusions

Dramatic changes in age distributions of prostate cancer incidence, mortality and hospitalizations altered age profiles of men with prostate cancer. This illustrated the changing nature of prostate cancer as a public health issue and has important implications for health care provision, e.g., the increased numbers of younger new patients have different needs from the increasing numbers of elderly long-term patients who now spend less time in hospital.

MeSH terms: Prostate cancer, age distribution; mortality, incidence, prevalence

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