Du X L, Sun C C, Milam M R, Bodurka D C, Fang S
School of Public Health, The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston, Texas 77030, USA.
Int J Gynecol Cancer. 2008 Jul-Aug;18(4):660-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1525-1438.2007.01081.x. Epub 2007 Sep 24.
The purpose of the study was to determine the ethnic disparities in socioeconomic status (SES) and in receiving definitive surgical treatment and adjuvant chemotherapy and to examine if these differences contribute to ethnic disparities in survival. We studied a population-based cohort of 5131 women diagnosed with epithelial ovarian cancer at age >or=65 between 1992 and 1999, identified from the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results-Medicare linked databases with up to 11 years of follow-up. The percentage of women diagnosed with epithelial ovarian cancer at advanced stage (stage III or IV) was 71.6% in Caucasians and 69.7% in African-Americans. Of these 4264 with stage IC-IV disease who are recommended for chemotherapy, fewer African-Americans received chemotherapy compared to Caucasians (50.2% versus 64.7%, P < 0.001). The risk of all-cause mortality in African-Americans was not significantly different from Caucasians (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.00, 95% CI = 0.88-1.13) after controlling for patient demographics, tumor characteristics, and comorbidity. The HR remained not significant in African-Americans compared to Caucasians after additionally adjusting for treatments (0.93, 0.82-1.06) or SES (0.94, 0.82-1.08) or both (0.88, 0.77-1.01). Women who underwent cancer-directed surgery and received adjuvant chemotherapy were 50% less likely to die than those who did not. The survival benefits from these therapies were similar in Caucasian and African-American women with ovarian cancer. There was no significant difference in survival between African-American and Caucasian women with ovarian cancer after adjusting for tumor characteristics, treatment, and sociodemographic factors. Although adjuvant chemotherapy was effective in prolonging survival, substantial numbers of women with ovarian cancer still did not receive chemotherapy.
本研究的目的是确定社会经济地位(SES)以及接受确定性手术治疗和辅助化疗方面的种族差异,并检验这些差异是否导致生存方面的种族差异。我们研究了一个基于人群的队列,该队列包含1992年至1999年间年龄≥65岁、被诊断为上皮性卵巢癌的5131名女性,这些数据来自监测、流行病学和最终结果-医疗保险链接数据库,随访时间长达11年。白人中被诊断为晚期(III期或IV期)上皮性卵巢癌的女性比例为71.6%,非裔美国人为69.7%。在这4264例被推荐进行化疗的IC-IV期疾病患者中,与白人相比,接受化疗的非裔美国人更少(50.2%对64.7%,P<0.001)。在控制了患者人口统计学特征、肿瘤特征和合并症后(风险比[HR]=1.00,95%置信区间[CI]=0.88-1.13),非裔美国人的全因死亡率与白人无显著差异。在进一步调整治疗(0.93,0.82-1.06)或SES(0.94,0.82-1.08)或两者(0.88,0.77-1.01)后,非裔美国人与白人相比,HR仍然不显著。接受癌症导向手术并接受辅助化疗的女性死亡可能性比未接受者低50%。这些治疗带来的生存益处在白人及非裔美国卵巢癌女性中相似。在调整肿瘤特征、治疗和社会人口学因素后,非裔美国和白人卵巢癌女性的生存情况无显著差异。尽管辅助化疗在延长生存期方面有效,但仍有大量卵巢癌女性未接受化疗。