The burden of rare cancers in Italy: The surveillance of rare cancers in Italy (RITA) project

  • Annalisa Trama
  • , Sandra Mallone
  • , Stefano Ferretti
  • , Francesca Meduri
  • , Riccardo Capocaccia
  • , Gemma Gatta
  • , Francesco Bellù
  • , Guido Mazzoleni
  • , Tomas Dal Cappello
  • , Adriano Giacomin
  • , Diego Serraino
  • , Antonella Zucchetto
  • , Marina Vercelli
  • , Alberto Quaglia
  • , Susanna Vitarelli
  • , Massimo Federico
  • , Claudia Cirilli
  • , Mario Fusco
  • , Maria Francesca Vitale
  • , Adele Traina
  • Maurizio Zarcone, Maria Michiara, Francesco Bozzani, Rosario Tumino, Eugenia Spata, Lucia Mangone, Massimo Vicentini, Fabio Falcini, Luigi Cremone, Arturo Iannelli, Mario Budroni, Teresa Intrieri, Adele Caldarella, Silvano Piffer, Maria Gentilini, Francesco La Rosa, Fabrizio Stracci, Giovanna Tagliabue, Paolo Contiero, Paola Zambon, Annarita Fiore, Franco Berrino, Paolo G. Casali, Lisa Licita, Angelo Paolo Dei Tos, Roberta De Angelis

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

18 Scopus citations

Abstract

Aims and background. The project Surveillance of rare cancers in Italy (RITA) provides, for the first time, estimates of the burden of rare cancers in Italy based on the list of rare cancers proposed in collaboration with the European project Surveillance of Rare Cancers in Europe (RARECARE). Methods. RITA analyzed data from Italian population-based cancer registries (CR). The period of diagnosis was 1988 to 2002, and vital status information was available up to December 31, 2003. Incidence rates were estimated for the period 1995-2002, survival for the years 2000-2002 (with the period method of Brenner), and complete prevalence at January 1, 2003. Results. Rare cancers are those with an incidence <6/100,000/year. In Italy, every year there are 60,000 new diagnoses of rare cancers corresponding to 15% of all new cancer diagnoses. Five-year relative survival was on the average worse for rare cancers (53%) than for common cancers (73%). A total of 770,000 patients were living in Italy in 2008 with a diagnosis of a rare cancer, 22% of the total cancer prevalence. Conclusions. Our estimates constitute a useful base for further research and support the idea that rare cancers are a public health problem that deserves attention. Centers of expertise for rare cancers that pool cases, expertise and resources could ensure an adequate clinical management for these diseases. Our data also showed that cancer registries are suitable sources of data to estimate incidence, prevalence and survival for rare cancers and should continue to monitoring rare cancers in Italy.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)550-580
Number of pages31
JournalTumori
Volume98
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - 2012
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Cancer registries
  • Incidence
  • Prevalence
  • Rare cancers
  • Survival

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