Sustainable care for children with cancer: a Lancet Oncology Commission.

Rifat Atun; Nickhill Bhakta; Avram Denburg; A Lindsay Frazier; Paola Friedrich; Sumit Gupta; Catherine G Lam; Zachary J Ward; Jennifer M Yeh; Claudia Allemani ORCID logo; +34 more... Michel P Coleman ORCID logo; Veronica Di Carlo ORCID logo; Eva Loucaides; Elizabeth Fitchett ORCID logo; Fabio Girardi ORCID logo; Susan E Horton; Freddie Bray; Eva Steliarova-Foucher; Richard Sullivan; Joanne F Aitken; Shripad Banavali; Agnes Binagwaho; Patricia Alcasabas; Federico Antillon; Ramandeep S Arora; Ronald D Barr; Eric Bouffet; Julia Challinor; Soad Fuentes-Alabi; Thomas Gross; Lars Hagander; Ruth I Hoffman; Cristian Herrera; Tezer Kutluk; Karen J Marcus; Claude Moreira; Kathy Pritchard-Jones; Oscar Ramirez; Lorna Renner; Leslie L Robison; Jaime Shalkow; Lillian Sung; Allen Yeoh; Carlos Rodriguez-Galindo; (2020) Sustainable care for children with cancer: a Lancet Oncology Commission. The Lancet Oncology, 21 (4). e185-e224. ISSN 1470-2045 DOI: 10.1016/S1470-2045(20)30022-X
Copy

We estimate that there will be 13·7 million new cases of childhood cancer globally between 2020 and 2050. At current levels of health system performance (including access and referral), 6·1 million (44·9%) of these children will be undiagnosed. Between 2020 and 2050, 11·1 million children will die from cancer if no additional investments are made to improve access to health-care services or childhood cancer treatment. Of this total, 9·3 million children (84·1%) will be in low-income and lower-middle-income countries. This burden could be vastly reduced with new funding to scale up cost-effective interventions. Simultaneous comprehensive scale-up of interventions could avert 6·2 million deaths in children with cancer in this period, more than half (56·1%) of the total number of deaths otherwise projected. Taking excess mortality risk into consideration, this reduction in the number of deaths is projected to produce a gain of 318 million life-years. In addition, the global lifetime productivity gains of US$2580 billion in 2020-50 would be four times greater than the cumulative treatment costs of $594 billion, producing a net benefit of $1986 billion on the global investment: a net return of $3 for every $1 invested. In sum, the burden of childhood cancer, which has been grossly underestimated in the past, can be effectively diminished to realise massive health and economic benefits and to avert millions of needless deaths.


picture_as_pdf
TLO COmmission AAM Appendix.pdf
subject
Supplemental Material
Available under Creative Commons: NC-ND 3.0

View Download
picture_as_pdf

Accepted Version


Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL EndNote HTML Citation JSON MARC (ASCII) MARC (ISO 2709) METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads