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首页> 外文期刊>International Journal of Cancer =: Journal International du Cancer >Racial/ethnic differences in colorectal cancer risk: the multiethnic cohort study
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Racial/ethnic differences in colorectal cancer risk: the multiethnic cohort study

机译:大肠癌风险中的种族/种族差异:多种族队列研究

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Incidence rates in the United States show clear racial/ethnic disparities for colorectal cancer. We examined the extent to which ethnic differences in risk factors could explain the age-adjusted variation in the risk of colorectal cancer, overall and by stage at diagnosis, among 165,711 African Americans, Japanese Americans, Latinos, Native Hawaiians and whites participating in the Multiethnic Cohort Study. Over a median follow-up period of 10.7 years, 2,564 incident cases of colorectal cancer were identified through surveillance, epidemiology and end result tumor registry linkages in Hawaii and California. Multivariable-adjusted Cox proportional hazard models were used to estimate relative risks (RR) and 95% confidence intervals (Cl) for each ethnic group compared to whites. After accounting for known/suspected risk factors, Japanese Americans (men, RR = 1.27, 95% Cl = 1.09-1.48; women, RR = 1.49, 95% Cl = 1.24-1.78) and African American women (RR = 1.48, 95% Cl = 1.23-1.79) remained at increased risk of colorectal cancer relative to whites; African American and Japanese American women were also at increased risk of advanced disease compared to whites. In site-specific analyses, after multivariable adjustment, African Americans (both sexes) and Japanese American women remained at increased risk for colon cancer, and Japanese Americans (both sexes) and Native Hawaiian men for rectal cancer compared to whites. The results of our study suggest that differences in the distribution of known/suspected risk factors account for only a modest proportion of the ethnic variation in colorectal cancer risk and that other factors, possibly including genetic susceptibility, are important contributors to the observed disparities in incidence.
机译:在美国,发病率显示出明显的种族/种族差异影响大肠癌。我们调查了165711名参加多种族的非洲裔美国人,日裔美国人,拉丁美洲人,夏威夷土著人和白人中,风险因素的种族差异在多大程度上可以解释大肠癌风险的年龄调整差异(总体上和在诊断时分阶段)队列研究。在10.7年的中位随访期内,通过监测,流行病学和最终结果肿瘤登记系统的联系,在夏威夷和加利福尼亚确定了2,564例大肠癌事件。与白人相比,使用多变量调整的Cox比例风险模型估算每个种族的相对风险(RR)和95%置信区间(Cl)。考虑到已知/怀疑的危险因素后,日裔美国人(男性,RR = 1.27,95%Cl = 1.09-1.48;女性,RR = 1.49,95%Cl = 1.24-1.78)和非裔美国人女性(RR = 1.48,95 %Cl = 1.23-1.79)相对于白人而言,结肠直肠癌的患病风险增高;与白人相比,非裔美国人和日裔美国人妇女罹患晚期疾病的风险也更高。在针对具体地点的分析中,经过多变量调整后,与白人相比,非洲裔美国人(男女)和日裔美国妇女患结肠癌的风险仍然较高,日裔美国人(男女)和夏威夷原住民男性患直肠癌的风险更高。我们的研究结果表明,已知/可疑风险因素分布的差异仅占大肠癌风险种族差异的适度比例,而其他因素(可能包括遗传易感性)是导致发病率差异的重要因素。

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