Modesitt Susan C, Huang Bin, Shelton Brent J, Wyatt Stephen
Division of Gynecologic Oncology, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Kentucky Chandler Medical Center, 800 Rose Street, Lexington, KY 40536-0298, USA.
Gynecol Oncol. 2006 Oct;103(1):300-6. doi: 10.1016/j.ygyno.2006.03.009. Epub 2006 May 2.
The study objectives were to assess the effect of age, to evaluate the impact of smoking, and to determine the effect of rural residence on tumor characteristics, treatment modalities, and outcomes for Kentucky's endometrial cancer patients.
The Kentucky Cancer Registry identified Kentucky residents diagnosed with endometrial cancer from 1995 to 2002. Data abstracted included demographics, tumor characteristics, treatment, and recurrence/survival status.
Three thousand five hundred and sixty-two women were diagnosed with endometrial cancer. Mean age at diagnosis decreased significantly (P=0.0388) over the 7-year period. Smokers had higher grade, stage, and worse outcomes. Rural women more often lacked commercial insurance, underwent less comprehensive surgical evaluation, and had less multimodality treatment. Increasing age (P<0.0001), positive or unknown smoking status (P=0.0003), black race (P<0.0001), no commercial insurance (P<0.0001), increasing grade or advanced stage (P<0.0001), small size of treating hospital (P<0.0001), and unknown nodal status (P<0.0001) were negatively associated with disease-specific survival. Lymph node sampling was performed in only 38.6% of women. On multivariate analysis, age (RR 1.38 for 10 year increments; P<0.0001), smoking (RR 1.38; P=0.008), no commercial insurance or Medicaid (RR 1.87; P=0.0007), rural residence (RR 0.77; P=0.011), advanced stage and grade (RR 7.96, 3.96; P<0.0001), and no nodal evaluation or unknown nodal status (RR 2.32, 2.51; P<0.0001) significantly effected disease-specific survival.
Our data support a trend toward a younger age for endometrial cancer diagnosis, confirm the adverse impact of smoking and socioeconomic factors, and demonstrate an association between incomplete surgical staging and decreased survival.
本研究的目的是评估年龄的影响,评价吸烟的作用,并确定农村居住情况对肯塔基州子宫内膜癌患者的肿瘤特征、治疗方式及预后的影响。
肯塔基州癌症登记处识别出1995年至2002年期间被诊断为子宫内膜癌的肯塔基州居民。提取的数据包括人口统计学信息、肿瘤特征、治疗情况以及复发/生存状态。
3562名女性被诊断为子宫内膜癌。在这7年期间,诊断时的平均年龄显著下降(P = 0.0388)。吸烟者的肿瘤分级更高、分期更晚,预后更差。农村女性更常没有商业保险,接受的综合手术评估较少,且多模式治疗较少。年龄增加(P < 0.0001)、吸烟状态为阳性或未知(P = 0.0003)、黑人种族(P < 0.0001)、没有商业保险(P < 0.0001)、分级增加或分期晚期(P < 0.0001)、治疗医院规模小(P < 0.0001)以及淋巴结状态未知(P < 0.0001)与疾病特异性生存呈负相关。仅38.6%的女性进行了淋巴结取样。多因素分析显示,年龄(每增加10岁RR为1.38;P < 0.0001)、吸烟(RR为1.38;P = 0.008)、没有商业保险或医疗补助(RR为1.87;P = 0.0007)、农村居住情况(RR为0.77;P = 0.011)、晚期和高分级(RR分别为7.96、3.96;P < 0.0001)以及没有进行淋巴结评估或淋巴结状态未知(RR分别为2.32、2.51;P < 0.0001)对疾病特异性生存有显著影响。
我们的数据支持子宫内膜癌诊断年龄呈年轻化的趋势,证实了吸烟和社会经济因素的不利影响,并表明手术分期不完整与生存率降低之间存在关联。