Biliary tract cancer incidence and trends in the United States by demographic group, 1999-2013

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Abstract

Background: Biliary tract cancers (BTCs) are rare but deadly cancers (gallbladder cancer [GBC], intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma [ICC], extrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma [ECC], and ampulla of Vater cancer [AVC]). A recent US study reported increasing GBC incidence among people younger than 45 years and blacks; however, it did not examine trends for other biliary tract sites. Methods: This study characterized demographic differences in BTC incidence rates and time trends by anatomic site. Population-based North American Association of Central Cancer Registries data were used to calculate age-adjusted incidence rates, incidence rate ratios (IRRs), and estimated annual percent changes (eAPCs) for 1999-2013 by site and demographic group. For sites with significant differences in eAPC by age group, IRRs were compared by age group. Results: GBC incidence rates declined among women (eAPC, –0.5%/y; P =.01) and all racial/ethnic groups except for non-Hispanic blacks, among whom rates increased (1.8%/y; P

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Van Dyke, A. L., Shiels, M. S., Jones, G. S., Pfeiffer, R. M., Petrick, J. L., Beebe-Dimmer, J. L., & Koshiol, J. (2019). Biliary tract cancer incidence and trends in the United States by demographic group, 1999-2013. Cancer, 125(9), 1489–1498. https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.31942

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