Aragonés Nuria, Ramis Rebeca, Pollán Marina, Pérez-Gómez Beatriz, Gómez-Barroso Diana, Lope Virginia, Boldo Elena Isabel, García-Pérez Javier, López-Abente Gonzalo
Environmental and Cancer Epidemiology Unit, National Centre for Epidemiology, Carlos III Institute of Health, Madrid, Spain.
BMC Cancer. 2007 Jan 3;7:3. doi: 10.1186/1471-2407-7-3.
Oesophageal carcinoma is one of the most common cancers worldwide. Its incidence and mortality rates show a wide geographical variation at a world and regional level. Geographic mapping of age-standardized, cause-specific death rates at a municipal level could be a helpful and powerful tool for providing clues leading to a better understanding of its aetiology.
This study sought to describe the geographic distribution of oesophageal cancer mortality for Spain's 8077 towns, using the autoregressive spatial model proposed by Besag, York and Mollié. Maps were plotted, depicting standardised mortality ratios, smoothed relative risk (RR) estimates, and the spatial pattern of the posterior probability of RR being greater than 1.
Important differences associated with area of residence were observed in risk of dying from oesophageal cancer in Spain during the study period (1989-1998). Among men, excess risk appeared across the north of the country, along a band spanning the length of the Cantabrian coastline, Navarre, the north of Castile & León and the north-west of La Rioja. Excess risk was likewise observed in the provinces of Cadiz and part of Seville in Andalusia, the islands of Tenerife and Gran Canaria, and some towns in the Barcelona and Gerona areas. Among women, there was a noteworthy absence of risk along the mid-section of the Cantabrian seaboard, and increases in mortality, not observed for men, in the west of Extremadura and south-east of Andalusia.
These major gender- and area-related geographical differences in risk would seem to reflect differences in the prevalence of some well-established and modifiable risk factors, including smoking, alcohol consumption, obesity and diet. In addition, excess risks were in evidence for both sexes in some areas, possibly suggesting the implication of certain local environmental or socio-cultural factors. From a public health standpoint, small-area studies could be very useful for identifying locations where epidemiological research and intervention measures ought to receive priority, given the potential for reducing risk in certain places.
食管癌是全球最常见的癌症之一。其发病率和死亡率在全球及区域层面存在广泛的地理差异。市级层面按年龄标准化的特定病因死亡率地理图谱可能是一个有助于更好理解其病因的有力工具。
本研究试图利用贝萨格、约克和莫利提出的自回归空间模型描述西班牙8077个城镇食管癌死亡率的地理分布。绘制了地图,展示标准化死亡率比、平滑相对风险(RR)估计值以及RR大于1的后验概率的空间模式。
在研究期间(1989 - 1998年),西班牙因食管癌死亡风险存在与居住地区相关的重要差异。在男性中,该国北部、沿坎塔布连海岸线、纳瓦拉、卡斯蒂利亚 - 莱昂北部和拉里奥哈西北部的狭长地带出现风险过高情况。在安达卢西亚的加的斯省和塞维利亚部分地区、特内里费岛和大加那利岛以及巴塞罗那和赫罗纳地区的一些城镇也观察到风险过高。在女性中,坎塔布连海岸中部明显没有风险,而在埃斯特雷马杜拉西部和安达卢西亚东南部出现了男性未观察到且死亡率增加的情况。
这些与性别和地区相关的主要地理风险差异似乎反映了一些既定且可改变的风险因素(包括吸烟、饮酒、肥胖和饮食)患病率的差异。此外,某些地区两性均存在风险过高情况,这可能表明某些当地环境或社会文化因素的影响。从公共卫生角度来看,鉴于在某些地方降低风险的可能性,小区域研究对于确定流行病学研究和干预措施应优先开展的地点可能非常有用。