Paltoo Dina N, Chu Kenneth C
Cancer Prevention Studies Branch, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
Public Health Rep. 2004 Jul-Aug;119(4):443-51. doi: 10.1016/j.phr.2004.05.009.
Cancer is a major public health concern in American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) communities. However, information on the incidence of cancer is lacking for this group. The purpose of this study is to report cancer incidence patterns for the U.S. AI/AN population.
Age-adjusted annual cancer incidence rates for 1992 through 1999 were calculated for 12 Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) areas, representing a sample (42%) of the U.S. AI/AN population. Trends in cancer incidence rates for the AI/AN sample were determined using standard linear regression of log-transformed rates and were compared to those of the U.S. white population.
The top five incident cancers (from highest to lowest) among AI/AN males were prostate, lung and bronchus, colon and rectum, kidney and renal pelvis, and stomach cancers. Among AI/AN women, cancers of the breast, colon and rectum, lung and bronchus, endometrium, and ovary ranked highest. Four sites where cancer incidence rates are greater for AI/ANs than for whites include gallbladder (the AI/AN rate was 4.1 times the rate for white males and 2.6 times the rate for white females), liver and intrahepatic bile duct cancers (1.3 times for males and 2.3 times for females), stomach (1.2 times for males and 1.5 times for females), and kidney and renal pelvis (1.03 times for males and 1.07 times for females). The data show increasing trends for AI/AN males and females and declining trends for white males and females for colorectal, stomach, and pancreatic cancers and leukemia. Similar differences between AI/AN rates and white rates were found for urinary bladder cancers in males and gallbladder cancer in females.
Analysis of SEER data allowed for the determination of disparities in cancer incidence between a sample of the U.S. AI/AN population and the white population. The findings of this study provide baseline information necessary for developing cancer prevention and intervention strategies specific to the AI/AN population to address these cancer disparities.
癌症是美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民(AI/AN)社区主要的公共卫生问题。然而,该群体的癌症发病率信息匮乏。本研究旨在报告美国AI/AN人群的癌症发病模式。
计算了1992年至1999年12个监测、流行病学和最终结果(SEER)地区年龄调整后的年癌症发病率,这些地区代表了美国AI/AN人群的一个样本(42%)。使用对数转换率的标准线性回归确定AI/AN样本的癌症发病率趋势,并与美国白人人群的趋势进行比较。
AI/AN男性中发病率最高的五种癌症(从高到低)依次为前列腺癌、肺癌和支气管癌、结肠直肠癌、肾癌和肾盂癌以及胃癌。在AI/AN女性中,乳腺癌、结肠直肠癌、肺癌和支气管癌、子宫内膜癌和卵巢癌的发病率最高。AI/AN人群癌症发病率高于白人的四个部位包括胆囊(AI/AN男性发病率是白人男性的4.1倍,女性是2.6倍)、肝癌和肝内胆管癌(男性为1.3倍,女性为2.3倍)、胃癌(男性为1.2倍,女性为1.5倍)以及肾癌和肾盂癌(男性为1.03倍,女性为1.07倍)。数据显示,AI/AN男性和女性的结直肠癌、胃癌、胰腺癌和白血病发病率呈上升趋势而白人男性和女性呈下降趋势。在男性膀胱癌和女性胆囊癌方面,AI/AN发病率与白人发病率也存在类似差异。
对SEER数据的分析有助于确定美国AI/AN人群样本与白人人群在癌症发病率上的差异。本研究结果为制定针对AI/AN人群癌症差异的癌症预防和干预策略提供了必要的基线信息。