Survival for childhood bone cancer is slightly lower in the UK than in any other Western European country, according to research published in the British Journal of Cancer.
Although five-year survival from childhood cancer in the UK has now reached 75%, and for some types of cancer survival is over 90%, survival for osteosarcoma – the most common type of childhood bone cancer – has not improved in the last 20 years, remaining at about 60%. The researchers, funded by the Bone Cancer Research Trust, believe that this could be due to later diagnosis of the disease and different ways of treating osteosarcoma in the UK. The study, which looked at all cases of childhood bone cancer between 1981 and 2000 in northern England and the West Midlands, found that around 60% of patients survived five years or more. Around 65% of childhood osteosarcoma patients survive a diagnosis of the disease across the rest of Western Europe. Eastern Europe had a lower survival figure than the UK of around 43%. Dr Richard McNally, lead author based at Newcastle University, said: “We know that treatment options for this disease vary across Europe. For example, a child diagnosed with osteosarcoma in the UK may be given a different course of treatment to a patient in Germany, where they tend to be given a more intense course of radiotherapy and surgery. “Since 1997, specialists in the UK have been working with their counterparts across Europe to standardise and improve the treatment and management of children with cancer. Today, nearly all trials involving British patients have been developed in collaboration with European colleagues and are open across many European countries – so we hope to see survival rates improving in the future.”