Abstract
            Background: Liver  cancer mortality is high in Thailand but utility of related vital statistics is  limited due to national vital registration (VR) data being under reported for  specific causes of deaths. Accurate methodologies and reliable supplementary  data are needed to provide worthy national vital statistics. This study aimed to  model liver cancer deaths based on verbal autopsy (VA) study in 2005 to provide  more accurate estimates of liver cancer deaths than those reported. The results  were used to estimate number of liver cancer deaths during 2000-2009.  
 Methods: A verbal autopsy (VA) was carried out in 2005 based on a sample of 9,644 deaths  from nine provinces and it provided reliable information on causes of deaths by  gender, age group, location of deaths in or outside hospital, and causes of  deaths of the VR database. Logistic regression was used to model liver cancer  deaths and other variables. The estimated probabilities from the model were  applied to liver cancer deaths in the VR database, 2000-2009. Thus, the more  accurately VA-estimated numbers of liver cancer deaths were obtained.  
 Results: The model fits the data quite well with sensitivity 0.64. The confidence  intervals from statistical model provide the estimates and their precisions. The  VA-estimated numbers of liver cancer deaths were higher than the corresponding  VR database with inflation factors 1.56 for males and 1.64 for females.  
 Conclusion: The statistical methods used in this study can be applied to available mortality  data in developing countries where their national vital registration data are of  low quality and supplementary reliable data are available.