• Lutte contre les cancers

  • Observation

Female Reproductive Cancers and the Sex Gap in Survival

Menée à partir de données 1955-2020 de 20 pays, cette étude de cohorte analyse, en fonction du sexe, la survie et les causes de décès et examine le rôle des cancers gynécologiques dans ces résultats

IMPORTANCE On average, females live longer than males. Research on sex differences in longevity has traditionally focused on higher mortality among males; however, the contribution of female reproductive cancers to survival gaps between females and males remains insufficiently quantified.

OBJECTIVE To assess the female-to-male survival gaps by estimating the contribution of age, birth cohort, and cause of death to sex differences in survival, with a particular emphasis on female reproductive cancers—breast and gynecological cancers—in long-term longevity disparities.

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS This cohort study used population-level mortality data from 20 countries with complete records from 1955 to 2020 from the Human Mortality and World Health Organization Mortality Databases. Data were analyzed from January 2023 to September 2025.

EXPOSURE Geographic location (Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the UK, and the US).

MAIN OUTCOME AND MEASURES The primary outcome was the truncated cross-sectional average length of life (TCAL), which incorporates historical mortality information for all birth cohorts alive at a given time. For each country, the sex gap in survival—measured as the difference in TCAL between females and males—was calculated, decomposed, and presented graphically by birth cohort, age, and calendar year.

RESULTS The analysis encompassed 264.4 million deaths from all causes (119.1 million female [45.1%]; 145.2 million male [54.9%]), including 11.5 million deaths from female reproductive cancers. The sex gap in TCALs ranged from 8.31 (95% CI, 8.28-8.34) years in Hungary to 4.22 (95% CI, 4.20-4.25) years in the Netherlands. Across all countries, females had a survival advantage for major causes of death, except for neoplasms at reproductive ages. In most populations, females aged between 35 and 60 years experienced a consistent cross-cohort excess in cancer mortality compared with males, mainly due to breast cancer and, to a lesser extent, gynecological cancers. Eliminating female reproductive cancers would increase the survival of females and expand the sex gap in TCALs by an estimated mean of 0.77 (95% CI, 0.75-0.78) years, ranging from 0.96 (95% CI, 0.92-1.00) years in Ireland to 0.51 (95% CI, 0.50-0.52) years in Japan.

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE In this population-level cohort study of 20 low-mortality countries, females aged 35 to 60 years experienced disadvantage in cancer mortality compared with males—a consistent pattern observed across birth cohorts and over time. These findings underscore the ongoing need for action on the prevention, early detection, and treatment of early-onset female reproductive cancers.

JAMA Network Open , résumé, 2026

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