Meliker Jaymie R, Goovaerts Pierre, Jacquez Geoffrey M, Avruskin Gillian A, Copeland Glenn
Department of Preventive Medicine, State University of New York, Stony Brook, NY, USA.
Cancer. 2009 May 15;115(10):2212-21. doi: 10.1002/cncr.24251.
Racial disparities in survival from breast and prostate cancer are well established; however, the roles of societal/socioeconomic factors and innate/genetic factors in explaining the disparities remain unclear. One approach for evaluating the relative importance of societal and innate factors is to quantify how the magnitude of racial disparities changes according to the geographic scales at which data are aggregated. Disappearance of racial disparities for some levels of aggregation would suggest that modifiable factors not inherent at the individual level are responsible for the disparities.
The Michigan Cancer Surveillance Program compiled a dataset from 1985 to 2002 that included 124,218 breast cancer cases and 120,615 prostate cancer cases with 5-year survival rates of 78% and 75%, respectively. Absolute and relative differences in survival rates for whites and blacks were quantified across different geographic scales using statistics that adjusted for population size to account for the small numbers problem common with minority populations.
Whites experienced significantly higher survival rates for prostate and breast cancer compared with blacks throughout much of southern Michigan in analyses conducted using federal House legislative districts; however, in smaller geographic units (state House legislative districts and community-defined neighborhoods), disparities diminished and virtually disappeared.
The current results suggest that modifiable societal factors are responsible for apparent racial disparities in breast and prostate cancer survival observed at larger geographic scales. This research presents a novel strategy for taking advantage of inconsistencies across geographic scales to evaluate the relative importance of innate and societal-level factors in explaining racial disparities in cancer survival.
乳腺癌和前列腺癌患者生存方面的种族差异已得到充分证实;然而,社会/社会经济因素与内在/遗传因素在解释这些差异中所起的作用仍不明确。评估社会因素和内在因素相对重要性的一种方法是量化种族差异的程度如何根据数据汇总的地理尺度而变化。某些汇总层面上种族差异的消失将表明,个体层面不存在的可改变因素是造成这些差异的原因。
密歇根癌症监测项目汇编了1985年至2002年的数据集,其中包括124218例乳腺癌病例和120615例前列腺癌病例,5年生存率分别为78%和75%。使用针对人口规模进行调整的统计数据,在不同地理尺度上对白人和黑人的生存率绝对差异和相对差异进行了量化,以解决少数族裔人群常见的小样本问题。
在使用联邦众议院立法选区进行的分析中,在密歇根州南部大部分地区,白人前列腺癌和乳腺癌的生存率明显高于黑人;然而,在较小的地理单元(州众议院立法选区和社区定义的街区)中,差异缩小并几乎消失。
目前的结果表明,可改变的社会因素是在较大地理尺度上观察到的乳腺癌和前列腺癌生存方面明显种族差异的原因。这项研究提出了一种新策略,利用地理尺度上的不一致性来评估内在因素和社会层面因素在解释癌症生存种族差异中的相对重要性。