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Projections for the period 1995-2029 suggest that the number
of men dying from mesothelioma in Western Europe each year will almost double over the
next 20 years, from 5000 in 1998 to about 9000 around 2018, and then decline, with a total
of about a quarter of a million deaths over the next 35 years. The highest risk will be
suffered by men born around 1945-50, of whom about 1 in 150 will die of mesothelioma.
Asbestos use in Western Europe remained high until 1980, and substantial quantities are
still used in several European countries. These projections are based on the fit of a
simple age and birth cohort model to male pleural cancer mortality from 1970 to 1989 for
six countries (Britain, France, Germany, Italy, The Netherlands and Switzerland) which
together account for three-quarters of the population of Western Europe. The model was
tested by comparing observed and predicted numbers of deaths for the period 1990-94. The
ratio of mesothelioma to recorded pleural cancer mortality has been 1.6:1 in Britain but
was assumed to be 1:1 in other countries.
Br J Cancer 1999 Feb;79(3-4):666-72
Peto J, Decarli A, La Vecchia C, Levi F, Negri E
Section of Epidemiology, The Institute of Cancer Research, Sutton, Surrey, UK.
PMID: 10027347, UI: 99149593
*** POSTED MARCH 24, 1999 *** |