Skin melanoma, malignant (ICD10 C43): combined sexes

 

Five-year relative survival by stage and age at diagnosis (2003-2007 diagnosis period)

 

 

Five-year relative survival (with 95% confidence interval) by stage at diagnosis (2003-2007)

Age at diagnosis

Total

Stage I

Stage II

Stage III

Stage IV

Unknown

 

all 15-99

86.6%

98.2%

82.7%

63.7%

27.1%

85.4%

(unstandardized)

(84.1-88.8%)

(95.7-100%)

(76.3-88.3%)

(55.7-71%)

(16.9-38.6%)

(75.4-93.3%)

 

all 15-99

86.0%

96.8%

82.5%

60.6%

32.0%

84.5%

(age-standardized)#

(80.5-90.5%)

 

15-44

91.4%

97.4%

88.0%

68.5%

60.0%

96.4%

(88.4-93.5%)

(94.9-98.8%)

(78.2-93.7%)

(54.6-79.0%)

(25.3-82.8%)

(86.0-99.2%)

 

45-54

85.7%

97.0%

85.0%

58.0%

30.3%

80.8%

(80.1-89.9%)

(91.7-99.2%)

(68.9-93.4%)

(39.2-73.0%)

(8.9-55.6%)

(40.0-95.6%)

 

55-64

85.2%

95.6%

84.3%

53.6%

7.8%

88.6%

(80.0-89.3%)

(88.7-99.4%)

(70.5-92.7%)

(35.0-69.6%)

(0.5-29.8%)

(74.6-95.5%)

 

65-74

82.0%

98.8%

78.6%

52.5%

23.4%

70.6%

(75.4-87.6%)

(91.9-100%)

(62.3-90.6%)

(31.1-71.6%)

(7.4-44.7%)

(45.0-88.4%)

 

75-99

82.4%

93.8%

71.3%

70.3%

26.4%

79.2%

(72.9-91.3%)

(77.2-100%)

(54.6-87.2%)

(52.9-86.3%)

(9.6-47.8%)

(52.6-100%)

 

 

Footnotes:

AJCC stage (5th edition) is used here.

Patients with unspecified nodal status (N category) or distant metastatic status (M category) have been assumed to be N0 and M0, respectively.

This may result in slight underestimation of survival for Stage I-III cases in older age-groups.

Cases with unspecified T category are left unstaged unless N & M categories are sufficient to allow staging.

# Age-standardized figures use the standard patient population proposed for this cancer by:

Corazziari I., Quinn M. & Capocaccia R. 2004. Standard cancer patient population for age standardising survival ratios. Eur J Cancer 40: 2307-2316.

(Population weights = age 15-44 x28000, 45-54 x17000, 55-64 x21000, 65-74 x20000, 75-99 x14000)

Exclusions (as in EUROCARE):

Patients aged <15 or >99 at diagnosis; death-certificate-only (DCO) and autopsy-only cases; second or subsequent malignancies in the same patient

(or the less serious of two or more synchronously-diagnosed malignancies); in situ carcinomas and tumours of uncertain behaviour.

© National Cancer Registry Ireland 2011 (October 2011)  Relative survival statistics for Irish cancer patients