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Detecting a Local Cohort Effect for Cancer Mortality Data Using a Varying Coefficient Model.


ABSTRACT: Cancer mortality is increasing with the aging of the population in Japan. Cancer information obtained through feasible methods is therefore becoming the basis for planning effective cancer control programs. There are three time-related factors affecting cancer mortality, of which the cohort effect is one. Past descriptive epidemiologic studies suggest that the cohort effect is not negligible in cancer mortality.In this paper, we develop a statistical method for automatically detecting a cohort effect and assessing its statistical significance for cancer mortality data using a varying coefficient model.The proposed method was applied to liver and lung cancer mortality data on Japanese men for illustration. Our method detected significant positive or negative cohort effects. The relative risk was 1.54 for liver cancer mortality in the cohort born around 1934 and 0.83 for lung cancer in the cohort born around 1939.Cohort effects detected using the proposed method agree well with previous descriptive epidemiologic findings. In addition, the proposed method is expected to be sensitive enough to detect smaller, previously undetected birth cohort effects.

SUBMITTER: Tonda T 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4626393 | biostudies-literature | 2015

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Detecting a Local Cohort Effect for Cancer Mortality Data Using a Varying Coefficient Model.

Tonda Tetsuji T   Satoh Kenichi K   Kamo Ken-ichi K  

Journal of epidemiology 20150808 10


<h4>Background</h4>Cancer mortality is increasing with the aging of the population in Japan. Cancer information obtained through feasible methods is therefore becoming the basis for planning effective cancer control programs. There are three time-related factors affecting cancer mortality, of which the cohort effect is one. Past descriptive epidemiologic studies suggest that the cohort effect is not negligible in cancer mortality.<h4>Methods</h4>In this paper, we develop a statistical method for  ...[more]

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