Skip to main page content

Epidemiology of retinoblastoma in Canada during 1992-2010

My Session Status

What:
Paper Presentation | Présentation d'article
When:
1:51 PM, Saturday 15 Jun 2019 (9 minutes)
Where:
Québec City Convention Centre - Room 202 | Salle 202
Theme:
Pediatric Ophthalmology

Authors: Rami Darwich, Feras Ghazawi, Elham Rahme, Nebras Alghazawi, Denis Sasseville, Miguel N. Burnier, Ivan V. Litvinov

Author Disclosure Block: R. Darwich: None. F. Ghazawi: None. E. Rahme: None. N. Alghazawi: None. D. Sasseville: None. M.N. Burnier: None. I.V. Litvinov: None.

Abstract Body:

Purpose: escriptive demographic statistics are important components of effective cancer control programs. The current study was conducted to examine the epidemiology of retinoblastoma (RB) in Canada during the period of 1992-2010 using 2 distinct population-based databases. 

Study Design: Retrospective cross-sectional population-based study. Methods: We examined data on the incidence of RB using 2 distinct population-based cancer registeries (Canadian Cancer Registry (CCR) and Le Registre Québécois du Cancer) for the period of 1992-2010 using International Classification of Diseases for Oncology ICD-O-3 codes. Data on sex and age of patients and laterality of RB were analyzed. 

Results: There were 445 patients diagnosed with RB in Canada between 1992 and 2010. The average annual incidence rate of RB, for the period 1992-2010, was found to be 11.58 (95% CI 10.48-12.76) cases per million children under the age of 5 per year. Linear regression analyses of the RB incidence rates per million children younger than 5 years revealed no statistically significant changes in incidence during the study period (coefficient of determination [R2]= 0.08; p=0.60). The mean age ± standard deviation (SD) at the time of diagnosis was 2.35 ± 6.85 years, and the male-to-female incidence rate was 1:1.02 (M:F 220:225). The laterality of the reported cases of RB was found to be 81.48% for unilateral cases and 18.52% for bilateral cases. Provincially, Nova Scotia had an incidence rate of 23.93 (95% CI 14.62-36.96) which is up to three-fold the national average annual incidence rate. The incidence rates of RB across Canadian cities were comparable to the national average. 

Conclusions: Our findings indicate continuity of clinical trends between Canada, United States and other developed countries. This study will provide a foundation on which to monitor Canadian RB incidence patterns and can serve to further stimulate etiologic research.

Rami Darwich

Participant

My Session Status

Send Feedback

Session detail
Allows attendees to send short textual feedback to the organizer for a session. This is only sent to the organizer and not the speakers.
When enabled, you can choose to display attendee lists for individual sessions. Only attendees who have chosen to share their profile will be listed.
Enable to display the attendee list on this session's detail page. This change applies only to this session.

Changes here will affect all session detail pages unless otherwise noted