# Evolution in Laryngeal Cancer Mortality at the National and Subnational Level in Romania with 2030 Forecast

**Authors:** Andreea-Mihaela Banța, Nicolae-Constantin Balica, Simona Pîrvu, Karina-Cristina Marin, Kristine Guran, Ingrid-Denisa Barcan, Cristian-Ion Moț, Bogdan Hîrtie, Victor Banța, Delia Ioana Horhat

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/medicina61101743 · Medicina · 2025-09-25

## TL;DR

Laryngeal cancer mortality in Romania is declining but remains higher in rural and male populations, with geographic disparities and pandemic delays threatening progress.

## Contribution

This study provides the first detailed national and subnational analysis of laryngeal cancer mortality trends in Romania with 2030 forecasts.

## Key findings

- Male laryngeal cancer mortality rates are 18 times higher than in females.
- Rural areas have higher mortality rates than urban areas, with significant spatial clustering.
- Pandemic-related surgical delays may prolong mortality increases beyond 2030.

## Abstract

Background and Objectives: Laryngeal cancer imposes a disproportionate burden on speech, airway protection and long-term quality of life. Contemporary population-based data for Central and Eastern Europe remain scarce, and the post-pandemic trajectory is uncertain. Materials and Methods: We performed a nationwide, retrospective ecological time-series study using Romanian mortality registers and hospital-discharge files for 2017–2023. Crude and age-standardised mortality rates (ASMRs) were calculated, county-level indirect standardisation and spatial autocorrelation assessed and joinpoint regression quantified temporal trends. Forecasts to 2040 combined Holt–Winters/ARIMA models with Elliott-wave heuristics anchored to Fibonacci retracements. Results: In 2023, 798 laryngeal cancer deaths yielded a crude mortality of 3.65/100,000 (95% CI 3.41–3.91). Male mortality (7.07/100,000) exceeded female mortality 18-fold. Rural residents experienced a higher rate than urban counterparts (4.26 vs. 3.04/100,000), a difference unchanged after indirect age standardisation. National ASMR fell by 3.7% annually (p < 0.01), yet five counties formed a high-risk corridor (standardised mortality ratios 1.59–1.82); Moran’s I = 0.27 (p < 0.01) indicated significant spatial clustering. Pandemic-era surgical throughput collapsed by 48%, generating a backlog projected to persist beyond 2030. Ensemble forecasting anticipates a doubling of discharges and mortality between 2034 and 2037 unless smoking prevalence falls by ≥30% and radon exposure is curtailed. Conclusions: Although overall laryngeal cancer mortality in Romania is declining, the pace lags behind Western Europe and is threatened by geographic inequities and pandemic-related care delays. Aggressive tobacco control, radon-remediation policies and expansion of surgical and radiotherapeutic capacity are required to avert a forecasted surge in the next decade.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** laryngeal cancer (MONDO:0002358)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Laryngeal Cancer (MESH:D007822)
- **Chemicals:** radon (MESH:D011886)
- **Species:** Nicotiana tabacum (American tobacco, species) [taxon 4097]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

24 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12566133/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12566133