Scottish Cancer Registry
The Scottish Cancer Registry has been collecting population-based information on cancer since 1958. Details available for each case include personal, demographic and diagnosis information (site, histology, behaviour, histological confirmation, date and hospital of diagnosis). For patients diagnosed from 1997 onwards further information has been collected including tumour stage (for breast, cervical and colorectal cancer), tumour grade, more hospital details, and treatment information (dates and locations of surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy and hormone therapy). In 1997 the tumour-based database was converted into a patient-based database.
Potentially new cases are identified from a number of sources, including hospital discharge records, pathology and oncology databases, and death records. The information is linked using probability matching and a provisional registration created. Cancer Registration Officers (CROs) visit the hospitals and pull the medical records for these provisional registrations and the registration is then either confirmed, in which case extra information is collected from the medical notes, or deleted. The hospital visit does not occur until at least six months after the cancer diagnosis to allow treatment details to accumulate.
There are approximately 30,000 new diagnoses of malignant disease entered onto cancer registry database each year. Further details of the dataset are available on the Scottish Cancer Registry page of the ISD website and cancer statistics are also available from the ISD website.
Quality and timeliness are monitored annually by the United Kingdon and Ireland Association of Cancer Registries. Studies of the data quality suggest this is very good, both in terms of accuracy and completeness of ascertainment.
