Potential Years of Life Lost

The number of potential years of life lost is a population-based mortality indicator that estimates the excess number of years a person could have lived had they not died prematurely of cancer. It is an alternative to mortality rates for measuring the cancer burden in a population and gives more weight to cancers that occur in young people.

There are two main methods for calculating the number of years of life lost. The first method uses the difference between the age of death and a fixed life expectancy (usually 75 years). Individuals who die after the fixed age do not contribute to the total years of life lost. The second method uses standard life tables to estimate the number of years of life expected to be remaining at each age up to age 100, thereby providing a more robust estimate.

The Texas Cancer Registry (TCR) used the second method to calculate the total number of potential years of life lost due to cancer deaths in Texas To determine the number of years of life expected, TCR used tables from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Center for Health Statistics.

To calculate the total number of years of life lost, the number of years of life lost from each cancer death were added together. The total number of years of life lost was then divided by the number of deaths to give the average number of years of life lost per cancer death. Data are presented by cancer site, sex, and race/Hispanic ethnicity.

Some cancer sites have a large overall number of years of life lost due to the relatively large number of people who die from that particular cancer, such as lung cancer. Alternatively, some cancer sites have a high average number of years of life lost per cancer death often due to the younger age at which the cancer typically occurs, such as cervical cancer.

 

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