Retinoblastoma epidemiology and demographics

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

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Overview

Incidence and Prevalence

Here are some highlights listed by the SEER (Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results) about the incidence of retinoblastoma among children and adolescents.[1]

  • Retinoblastoma accounted for approximately 11% of cancers developing in the first year of life,but for only 3% of the cancers developing among children younger than 15 years of age.
  • In the US, approximately 300 children and adolescents younger than 20 years of age are diagnosed with retinoblastomas each year.
  • The vast majority of cases of retinoblastoma occur among young children with almost two-thirds(63%) of retinoblastomas occuring before the age of two years and 95% occuring before the age of 5 years.
  • The incidence of bilateral tumors was strongly age dependent with 42% of the retinoblastomas occuring in children less than one year of age being bilateral compared to 21% of those among children aged one year, and only 9% among older children.
  • Rates of retinoblastoma were the same among males (3.7 per million) and females (4.0 per million) and also among whites (3.7 per million) and blacks (4.0 per million).
  • There was no subsantial change in the retinoblastoma incidence during the 21 year period, 1975-95.
  • It is estimated that 38.2% of patients with hereditary retinoblastoma will develop a secondary malignancy with an associated long-term mortality rate of 26%.

References

See also

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