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September 26, 2000; 55 (6) Views & Reviews

The biphasic pattern of age-specific malignant brain tumor mortality rates

Jack E. Riggs
First published September 26, 2000, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.55.6.750
Jack E. Riggs
From the Departments of Neurology, Medicine, and Community Medicine, School of Medicine, West Virginia University at Morgantown.
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The biphasic pattern of age-specific malignant brain tumor mortality rates
Jack E. Riggs
Neurology Sep 2000, 55 (6) 750-753; DOI: 10.1212/WNL.55.6.750

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Abstract

Article abstract Many aging-associated neurologic disorders, including primary malignant brain tumors (MBT), share a common biphasic age-specific mortality rate pattern: initially increasing exponentially with age, and then declining. A modeling study using MBT mortality was conducted to determine if the observed biphasic pattern of MBT age-specific mortality rates emerges if one assumes that there exists a population subset that is inherently susceptible to MBT, and that the risk of mortality from MBT in that susceptible population subset continues to increase exponentially with age. A hypothetical population was subjected to 1988 general mortality risks. A population subset susceptible to MBT was subjected to both exponentially increasing 1988 general and MBT mortality risks. Expected MBT age-specific mortality rates in the total population (both general and MBT susceptible subsets) were determined. Expected MBT age-specific mortality rates in the total population initially increase exponentially with age, and then decline. Moreover, when the size of the MBT-susceptible population subset was set at 1/125 of the size of the general population size, the modeled pattern of age-specific MBT mortality rates closely mimicked the observed pattern of age-specific MBT mortality rates. The observed biphasic pattern of age-specific MBT mortality rates can be explained by the existence of an MBT-susceptible population subset in whom the risk of MBT mortality increases exponentially with age and population subset depletion occurs.

  • Received January 24, 2000.
  • Accepted in final form June 12, 2000.
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