Contains fulltext : 97456.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)BACKGROUND: The complement of the cancer mortality to incidence ratio [1-(M/I)] has been suggested as a valid proxy for 5-year relative survival. Whether this suggestion holds true for all types of cancer has not yet been adequately evaluated. METHODS: We used publicly available databases of cancer incidence, cancer mortality and relative survival to correlate relative survival estimates and 1-(M/I) estimates from Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, the USA and the Netherlands. We visually examined for which tumour sites 5-year relative survival cannot simply be predicted by the 1-(M/I) and evaluated similarities between countries. RESULTS: Country-...
BACKGROUND: Cancer survival varies widely between countries. The CONCORD study provides survival est...
Background Cancer survival varies widely between countries. The CONCORD study provides survival esti...
BACKGROUND: Mortality information is essential for estimating relative cancer survival (that exclude...
Background: The complement of the cancer mortality to incidence ratio [1 - (M/I)] has been suggested...
Background: The 5-year survival rate of cancer patients is the most commonly used statistic to refle...
PURPOSE: The ratio of cancer mortality and cancer incidence rates in a population has conventionally...
The 5-year survival rate of cancer patients is the most commonly used statistic to reflect improveme...
Introduction: The Mortality–Incidence Ratio complement [1 – MIR] is an indicator validated in variou...
Cancer survival is a key measure of the effectiveness of health-care systems. Persistent regional an...
SummaryBackgroundCancer survival is a key measure of the effectiveness of health-care systems. Persi...
Background: The Global Burden of Disease 2000 (GBD 2000) study starts from an analysis of the overal...
Background - Cancer survival varies widely between countries. The CONCORD study provides survival es...
BACKGROUND: In countries with local cancer registration, the national cancer incidence is usually es...
BACKGROUND: Worldwide data for cancer survival are scarce. We aimed to initiate worldwide surveillan...
BACKGROUND: Mortality estimates alone are not sufficient to understand the true magnitude of cancer ...
BACKGROUND: Cancer survival varies widely between countries. The CONCORD study provides survival est...
Background Cancer survival varies widely between countries. The CONCORD study provides survival esti...
BACKGROUND: Mortality information is essential for estimating relative cancer survival (that exclude...
Background: The complement of the cancer mortality to incidence ratio [1 - (M/I)] has been suggested...
Background: The 5-year survival rate of cancer patients is the most commonly used statistic to refle...
PURPOSE: The ratio of cancer mortality and cancer incidence rates in a population has conventionally...
The 5-year survival rate of cancer patients is the most commonly used statistic to reflect improveme...
Introduction: The Mortality–Incidence Ratio complement [1 – MIR] is an indicator validated in variou...
Cancer survival is a key measure of the effectiveness of health-care systems. Persistent regional an...
SummaryBackgroundCancer survival is a key measure of the effectiveness of health-care systems. Persi...
Background: The Global Burden of Disease 2000 (GBD 2000) study starts from an analysis of the overal...
Background - Cancer survival varies widely between countries. The CONCORD study provides survival es...
BACKGROUND: In countries with local cancer registration, the national cancer incidence is usually es...
BACKGROUND: Worldwide data for cancer survival are scarce. We aimed to initiate worldwide surveillan...
BACKGROUND: Mortality estimates alone are not sufficient to understand the true magnitude of cancer ...
BACKGROUND: Cancer survival varies widely between countries. The CONCORD study provides survival est...
Background Cancer survival varies widely between countries. The CONCORD study provides survival esti...
BACKGROUND: Mortality information is essential for estimating relative cancer survival (that exclude...