M. Thorn et al., TRENDS IN COLORECTAL-CANCER INCIDENCE IN SWEDEN 1959-93 BY GENDER, LOCALIZATION, TIME PERIOD, AND BIRTH COHORT, CCC. Cancer causes & control, 9(2), 1998, pp. 145-152
Objectives: This study examined invasive colorectal cancer incidence-r
ates in Sweden from 1959 through 1993 (n = 134,643 cases). Methods: Ag
e-standardized rates were calculated using the Swedish population in 1
970 as a reference. Results: In right-sided colon cancer (ascending an
d transverse colon including right and left flexures), male age-standa
rdized rates rose from 8.0 to 15.0 (1.8 percent annually, 95 percent c
onfidence interval [CI] = 1.3-2.4) and female rates increased from 9.1
to 14.4 (1.5 percent annually, CI = 1.0-2.0). For left-sided colon ca
ncer (descending and sigmoid colon), the rates have been stable recent
ly. For rectal cancer, the rates among men rose from 18.8 to 23.0 and
among women from 10.7 to 14.7. For both men and women, the relative ri
sk (RR) of right-sided colon cancer had been increasing in successive
generations, until leveling-off in those born after 1930. The RR of le
ft-sided colon cancer had been almost constant for cohorts born before
1930 but steadily decreasing in later-born cohorts. The RR of rectal
cancer was slightly increasing in successive cohorts. Conclusions: Cha
nges in lifestyle or carcinogenic exposures during early life probably
explain Swedish colorectal cancer incidence-trends better than improv
ed diagnostic activities.