Gross Cary P, McAvay Gail J, Krumholz Harlan M, Paltiel A David, Bhasin Devina, Tinetti Mary E
Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program and Primary Care Center, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, USA.
Ann Intern Med. 2006 Nov 7;145(9):646-53. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-145-9-200611070-00006.
Older adults with shorter life expectancies may receive less benefit from colorectal cancer screening than younger, healthier patients.
To determine the degree to which life expectancy after diagnosis of an early-stage cancer varies according to age or coexisting chronic illness.
Retrospective cohort study.
Population-based cancer registry with linked administrative claims data.
Patients 67 years of age or older who received a diagnosis of colorectal cancer from 1993 through 1999.
Chronic conditions were identified by searching Medicare claims. Using a life-table approach, the authors quantified the degree to which life expectancy associated with each cancer stage at diagnosis varied with patient age, sex, and burden of chronic conditions.
The final study sample consisted of 35 755 patients. After accounting for cancer stage at diagnosis, the authors found that life expectancy was strongly related to both age and the burden of chronic illness. Among men who received a diagnosis of stage I cancer at 67 years of age, life expectancy decreased from 19.1 years (95% CI, 17.8 to 20.5 years) for patients with no chronic conditions to 12.4 years (CI, 11.4 to 13.5 years) for those with 1 or 2 conditions and 7.6 years (CI, 6.1 to 9.4 years) for those with 3 or more conditions. A similar trend was noted among female counterparts, with life expectancy decreasing from approximately 23 years to 16 years and 7 years for the 3 chronic condition groups, respectively. For men and women 81 years of age with no chronic illnesses, life expectancy after stage I cancer diagnosis was 10.3 years (CI, 9.2 to 11.9 years) and 13.8 years (CI, 12.3 to 15.3 years), respectively.
Administrative claims may not identify all chronic conditions. Life expectancy estimates at the population level are averages and, therefore, may not accurately predict the life expectancy of individual patients.
Coexisting chronic illness is associated with a substantial reduction in life expectancy after diagnosis of early-stage colorectal cancer. Physicians should consider this when deciding whether to screen older persons.
预期寿命较短的老年人从结直肠癌筛查中获得的益处可能比年轻、健康的患者少。
确定早期癌症诊断后的预期寿命根据年龄或并存的慢性病而变化的程度。
回顾性队列研究。
基于人群的癌症登记处,并与行政索赔数据相链接。
1993年至1999年期间被诊断为结直肠癌的67岁及以上患者。
通过搜索医疗保险索赔来确定慢性病。作者采用生命表方法,量化了诊断时与每个癌症阶段相关的预期寿命随患者年龄、性别和慢性病负担变化的程度。
最终研究样本包括35755名患者。在考虑诊断时的癌症阶段后,作者发现预期寿命与年龄和慢性病负担都密切相关。在67岁时被诊断为I期癌症的男性中,无慢性病患者的预期寿命从19.1年(95%CI,17.8至20.5年)降至有1种或2种慢性病患者的12.4年(CI,11.4至13.5年)以及有3种或更多慢性病患者的7.6年(CI,6.1至9.4年)。在女性中也观察到类似趋势,这3组慢性病女性的预期寿命分别从约23年降至16年和7年。对于81岁无慢性病的男性和女性,I期癌症诊断后的预期寿命分别为10.3年(CI,9.2至11.9年)和13.8年(CI,12.3至15.3年)。
行政索赔可能无法识别所有慢性病。人群水平的预期寿命估计是平均值,因此可能无法准确预测个体患者的预期寿命。
并存的慢性病与早期结直肠癌诊断后的预期寿命大幅降低有关。医生在决定是否为老年人进行筛查时应考虑这一点。