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© 1982 Oxford University Press

research-article

A Cohort Analysis of U.S. Stomach Cancer Mortality 1950–1977

KENNETH G MANTON* and ERIC STALLARD*

*Duke University, Center for Demographic Studies Box 4732, Duke Station, Durham, North Carolina 27706, USA

Manton K G (Duke University, Center for Demographic Studies, Box 4732, Duke Station, Durham, North Carolina 27706, USA) and Stallard E. A cohort analysis of U.S. stomach cancer mortality 1950–1977 International Journal of Epidemiology 1982, 11: 49–61.

Models of human carcinogenesis, such as the multi-stage model of Armitage and Doll, are designed to explain the age increase in the incidence of cancers in individuals. As a consequence, analyses of population level age-specific death rates via such models are appropriately applied to cohort data where such data are available. In this study a multi-stage model is applied to cohort data for stomach cancer death rates in the U.S. population for nine distinct cohorts observed over a recent 28-year period (1950–1977). The multi-stage model parameters obtained from the analysis of the cohort data show significant differences from the parameters obtained from analyses of cross-sectional mortality data under the assumption of no cohort differences in age-specific stomach cancer death rates.

Received 17 June 1981


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