About this release

This publication by Public Health Scotland (PHS) reports on the number and percentage of patients who died within 30 days of starting their last cycle of systemic anti-cancer therapy (SACT). The data are reported for NHS Scotland and the three regional cancer networks for 15 tumour groups. The data can be broken down by cancer sub-group or, for the first time in this year’s release, by NHS Health Board of treatment or treatment intent.

The data have been visualised in a dashboard available in the dashboard section below. The content of this report will be reviewed and developed over time following feedback from stakeholders and in agreement with the SACT Programme Board.

Main points

There are currently no targets for SACT 30-day mortality. Results for the regional cancer networks and NHS Health Boards have been compared with the results for Scotland overall to identify any variation across the country. Mortality may vary between types of cancer due to the behaviour of the disease, the treatments available and the decisions taken by oncologists together with their patients.

  • For NHS Scotland, the cancer type with the highest SACT 30-day mortality was cancers of unknown primary at 11.8% (6 out of 51 patients died). The lowest SACT 30-day mortality was for germ cell cancer at 1.1% (2 out of 176 patients died).
  • Among the most commonly treated cancers, those with more than 1,000 patients treated in 2023, the highest SACT 30-day mortality was recorded for lung and chest cancer at 6.0% (146 out of 2,444 patients died). The lowest SACT 30-day mortality was for breast cancer at 2.6% (117 out of 4,542 patients died).
  • No regional cancer networks have significantly higher mortality than the Scotland-wide results. Two NHS Health Boards report higher SACT 30-day mortality rates than the Scotland average. NHS Ayrshire and Arran has a higher rate for lower gastrointestinal cancer and NHS Tayside has a higher rate for upper gastrointestinal cancer.
Image caption 30-day mortality by cancer type for NHS Scotland

Background

Guidance for the safe delivery of systemic anti-cancer therapy (DL (2023) 15) first published in 2012 and revised in 2023, sets the framework for the safe delivery of SACT. The guidance includes clinical trials. It recognises the need to report and review all deaths occurring within 30 days of SACT administration as part of NHS Board clinical governance arrangements.

SACT drugs include cytotoxic chemotherapy, targeted therapies and immunotherapy. Hormone therapy is not included in this report. This publication includes all adult patients who were prescribed SACT in secondary care in Scotland in 2023. All deaths occurring within 30 days of starting the last treatment cycle are included in this report. These deaths may be directly due to the treatment received, but deaths unrelated to treatment are also included. These could be due to disease progression, due to co-morbidities or due to any other unrelated cause.

Further information

The next release of this publication will be summer 2025.

General enquiries

If you have an enquiry relating to this publication, please email phs.sact@phs.scot .

Media enquiries

If you have a media enquiry relating to this publication, please contact the Communications and Engagement team.

Requesting other formats and reporting issues

If you require publications or documents in other formats, please email phs.otherformats@phs.scot.

To report any issues with a publication, please email phs.generalpublications@phs.scot.

Older versions of this publication

Versions of this publication released before 16 March 2020 may be found on the Data and Intelligence, Health Protection Scotland or Improving Health websites.

Last updated: 09 July 2024
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