Cancers (Aug 2023)

Cancer and Pregnancy: Estimates in Italy from Record-Linkage Procedures between Cancer Registries and the Hospital Discharge Database

  • Daniela Pierannunzio,
  • Alice Maraschini,
  • Tania Lopez,
  • Serena Donati,
  • Rosalba Amodio,
  • Fortunato Bianconi,
  • Rossella Bruni,
  • Marine Castaing,
  • Claudia Cirilli,
  • Giovanna Fantaci,
  • Linda Guarda,
  • Silvia Iacovacci,
  • Lucia Mangone,
  • Guido Mazzoleni,
  • Walter Mazzucco,
  • Anna Melcarne,
  • Elisabetta Merlo,
  • Fabio Parazzini,
  • Fedro Alessandro Peccatori,
  • Massimo Rugge,
  • Giuseppe Sampietro,
  • Giovanni Scambia,
  • Giovanna Scarfone,
  • Ausilia Sferrazza,
  • Fabrizio Stracci,
  • Antonina Torrisi,
  • Maria Francesca Vitale,
  • Silvia Francisci

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15174305
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 17
p. 4305

Abstract

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The aim of this study is to describe the frequency and trend of pregnancy-associated cancer (PAC) in Italy, an increasingly relevant phenomenon due to postponing age at childbirth. To this purpose, a population-based retrospective longitudinal study design based on cohorts of women aged 15–49 diagnosed with cancer and concomitant pregnancy is proposed. The study uses 19 population-based Cancer Registries, covering about 22% of Italy, and linked at an individual level with Hospital Discharge Records. A total of 2,861,437 pregnancies and 3559 PAC are identified from 74,165 women of the cohort with a rate of 1.24 PAC per 1000 pregnancies. The most frequent cancer site is breast (24.3%), followed by thyroid (23.9%) and melanoma (14.3%). The most frequent outcome is delivery (53.1%), followed by voluntary termination of pregnancy and spontaneous abortion (both 12.0%). The trend of PAC increased from 2003 to 2015, especially when the outcome is delivery, thus confirming a new attitude of clinicians to manage cancer throughout pregnancy. This represents the first attempt in Italy to describe PAC from Cancer Registries data; the methodology is applicable to other areas with the same data availability. Evidence from this study is addressed to clinicians for improving clinical management of women with PAC.

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