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首页> 外文期刊>BMC Cancer >Longitudinal, population-based study of racial/ethnic differences in colorectal cancer survival: impact of neighborhood socioeconomic status, treatment and comorbidity
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Longitudinal, population-based study of racial/ethnic differences in colorectal cancer survival: impact of neighborhood socioeconomic status, treatment and comorbidity

机译:结直肠癌生存的种族/族裔差异的基于人群的纵向研究:邻里社会经济状况,治疗和合并症的影响

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Background Colorectal cancer, if detected early, has greater than 90% 5-year survival. However, survival has been shown to vary across racial/ethnic groups in the United States, despite the availability of early detection methods. Methods This study evaluated the joint effects of sociodemographic factors, tumor characteristics, census-based socioeconomic status (SES), treatment, and comorbidities on survival after colorectal cancer among and within racial/ethnic groups, using the SEER-Medicare database for patients diagnosed in 1992–1996, and followed through 1999. Results Unadjusted colorectal cancer-specific mortality rates were higher among Blacks and Hispanic males than whites (relative rates (95% confidence intervals) = 1.34 (1.26–1.42) and 1.16 (1.04–1.29), respectively), and lower among Japanese (0.78 (0.70–0.88)). These patterns were evident for all-cause mortality, although the magnitude of the disparity was larger for colorectal cancer mortality. Adjustment for stage accounted for the higher rate among Hispanic males and most of the lower rate among Japanese. Among Blacks, stage and SES accounted for about half of the higher rate relative to Whites, and within stage III colon and stages II/III rectal cancer, SES completely accounted for the small differentials in survival between Blacks and Whites. Comorbidity did not appear to explain the Black-White differentials in colorectal-specific nor all-cause mortality, beyond stage, and treatment (surgery, radiation, chemotherapy) explained a very small proportion of the Black-White difference. The fully-adjusted relative mortality rates comparing Blacks to Whites was 1.14 (1.09–1.20) for all-cause mortality and 1.21 (1.14–1.29) for colorectal cancer specific mortality. The sociodemographic, tumor, and treatment characteristics also had different impacts on mortality within racial/ethnic groups. Conclusion In this comprehensive analysis, race/ethnic-specific models revealed differential effects of covariates on survival after colorectal cancer within each group, suggesting that different strategies may be necessary to improve survival in each group. Among Blacks, half of the differential in survival after colorectal cancer was primarily attributable to stage and SES, but differences in survival between Blacks and Whites remain unexplained with the data available in this comprehensive, population-based, analysis.
机译:背景如果大肠癌较早发现,其5年生存率将超过90%。但是,尽管有早期发现方法,但在美国,不同种族/族裔的生存率仍存在差异。方法本研究使用SEER-Medicare数据库针对经诊断为AIDS的患者评估了社会人口统计学因素,肿瘤特征,普查基础上的社会经济状况(SES),治疗以及合并症对大肠癌在种族/族群之间以及在种族/族群内部的生存的联合影响。 1992–1996年,以及随后的1999年。结果黑人和西班牙裔男性未校正的结直肠癌特异性死亡率高于白人(相对死亡率(95%置信区间)= 1.34(1.26-1.42)和1.16(1.04-1.29),分别)和日语(0.78(0.70–0.88))中的较低。这些模式对于全因死亡率而言是显而易见的,尽管对于大肠癌死亡率而言差异更大。阶段调整导致西班牙裔男性的发病率较高,而日本人的发病率较低。在黑人中,分期和SES占白人发病率的一半左右,而在III期结肠癌和II / III期直肠癌中,SES完全占了黑人和白人生存率的微小差异。合并症似乎并不能解释大肠特异性或全因死亡率的黑白差异,超过了阶段,而治疗(手术,放疗,化学疗法)解释了黑白差异的很小一部分。黑人和白人相比,经完全调整后的相对死亡率是,全因死亡率是1.14(1.09-1.20),大肠癌特定死亡率是1.21(1.14-1.29)。社会人口统计学,肿瘤和治疗特征对种族/族裔群体的死亡率也有不同的影响。结论在这项综合分析中,种族/种族特异性模型揭示了各组中协变量对结直肠癌术后生存的不同影响,这表明可能有必要采取不同策略来提高各组的生存率。在黑人中,结直肠癌后生存率差异的一半主要归因于分期和SES,但是在这种基于人群的综合分析中,尚无法解释黑人和白人之间的生存率差异。

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