Investigator

Truong‐Minh Pham

Alberta Health Services, Cancer Control Alberta

About

TPTruong‐Minh Pham
Papers(1)
Premature mortality d…
Collaborators(1)
Duc‐Cuong Le
Institutions(2)
Alberta Health Servic…Thai Binh University …

Papers

Premature mortality due to cervical and ovarian cancers in Japan, 2000 to 2020

AbstractAimUsing the national Japanese mortality data, we investigated whether there has been an improvement in the lifespan among Japanese women who died from cervical and ovarian cancers from the years 2000 through 2020.MethodsThe number of deaths due to cervical and ovarian cancers in Japan was obtained from the World Health Organization mortality database. We calculated age standardized rates (ASR) using the direct method adjusted to the World Standard Population. Years of life lost (YLL) due to those cancers were calculated using Japanese life tables. Average lifespan shortened (ALSS) measure was calculated as a ratio of YLL to the expected lifespan. We used the bootstrap method to calculate the 95% confidence interval (95% CI) for the ALSS measure.ResultsThe ASR for death remained mostly stable over the study at about two deaths per 100 000 women for cervical cancer, and three deaths for ovarian cancer. The ALSS values report that women who died from cervical cancer lost on average 28.3% of their lifespan (95% CI: 27.7–28.9) in 2000 and 26.6% (26.1–27.2) in 2020. Women who died from ovarian cancer lost on average 26.9% (26.5–27.4) and 23.5% (23.1–23.9) of their lifespan in 2000 and 2020, respectively.ConclusionThe ALSS results show that over a 20‐year period, women who died of cervical and ovary cancers in Japan had their lifespans prolonged by about two and three percentage points, respectively.

23Works
1Papers
1Collaborators
Central Nervous System NeoplasmsOvarian NeoplasmsHematologic NeoplasmsLeukemiaBreast NeoplasmsHead and Neck NeoplasmsKidney Neoplasms

Positions

2015–

Researcher

Alberta Health Services · Cancer Control Alberta

2014–

Researcher

University of Alberta · School of Public Health

2012–

Researcher

Alberta Health Services · Cancer Control Alberta

2010–

Post-doctoral

Radiation Effects Research Foundation · Epidemiology

2008–

Post-doctoral

University of Occupational and Environmental Health Japan · Preventive Medicine

2001–

Researcher

Thai Nguyen National General Hospital · ENT doctor (Otorhinolaryngology and Head&Neck Surgery)

1998–

Researcher

Université du Droit et la Santé de Lille 2 - Faculté de Médecine Henri-Warembourg · ENT resident (Le service d'ORL et de chirurgie cervico-faciale)

1993–

ENT doctor

Thai Nguyen National General Hospital · Otorhinolaryngology and Head&Neck Surgery

Education

2008

PhD in Cancer Epidemiology

University of Occupational and Environmental Health Japan · School of Medicine

2001

ENT specialist

Hanoi Medical University · National Otorhinolaryngology Hospital of VietNam

1993

MD

Thai Nguyen University, Thai Nguyen Medical School

Country

CA