Centers for Public Health Research and Evaluation, Battelle, 2987 Clairmont Road NE, Atlanta, GA 30329, USA.
Cancer Causes Control. 2009 Dec;20(10):1855-63. doi: 10.1007/s10552-009-9379-y.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) incidence rates in the US decreased rapidly since 1998. This is largely thought to reflect increases in utilization of CRC screening through detection and removal of adenomatous polyps. However, the extent to which the decrease varies by age, race/ethnicity, and differences in access to medical care is largely unknown.
Temporal trends in CRC incidence rates were examined from 1995 to 2004 by regression analysis according to age (50-64, ≥ 65), race/ethnicity (whites, African Americans, and Hispanics), and categories of county-level indicators of access to care (poverty, primary care physician supply [PCP], uninsured rate [age 50-64], and metro/nonmetro) using incidence data from 19 cancer registries, covering about 53% of the US population. Changes in colorectal endoscopic screening and fecal occult blood stool test (FOBT) from 1995-1997 to 2002-2004 for the same set of county-level indicators were also analyzed, using data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS).
Among whites, CRC incidence rates decreased significantly from 1998 through 2004 in age ≥ 65, but not in age 50-64 in counties with high uninsured or poverty rates, fewer PCPs, or in nonmetro areas. Among African Americans or Hispanics, rates did not decrease in age 50-64 in general and age ≥ 65 in counties with high poverty rates, low PCP supply, and nonmetro counties (African Americans). Colorectal endoscopic screening rates increased significantly among whites in both age groups, but not among Hispanics (aged 50-64 in general and aged ≥ 65 residing in high poverty counties) or African Americans residing in counties with higher uninsured rates (age 50-64), low PCP supply, high poverty rates, and nonmetro counties (age ≥ 65). FOBT rates remained unchanged during the study time period.
Our results suggest that individuals residing in poorer communities with lower access to medical care have not experienced the reduction in CRC incidence rates that have benefited more affluent communities; these disparities may be related to health care access barriers to colorectal endoscopic screening.
自 1998 年以来,美国的结直肠癌(CRC)发病率迅速下降。这主要归因于通过检测和切除腺瘤性息肉来提高 CRC 筛查的利用率。然而,发病率的下降程度因年龄、种族/族裔以及获得医疗保健的差异而有很大的不同,这在很大程度上尚不清楚。
根据年龄(50-64 岁、≥65 岁)、种族/族裔(白种人、非裔美国人和西班牙裔)和县级医疗保健获取指标类别(贫困、初级保健医生供应[PCP]、未参保率[50-64 岁]和城市/非城市地区),使用来自 19 个癌症登记处的发病率数据(覆盖了美国约 53%的人口),通过回归分析来检查 1995 年至 2004 年 CRC 发病率的时间趋势。还分析了针对同一组县级指标的结直肠内镜筛查和粪便潜血粪便检查(FOBT)在 1995-1997 年至 2002-2004 年期间的变化,数据来自行为风险因素监测系统(BRFSS)。
在白种人中,CRC 发病率在≥65 岁的年龄组中从 1998 年到 2004 年显著下降,但在高未参保率或贫困率、初级保健医生供应较少或非城市地区的 50-64 岁年龄组中并未下降。在非裔美国人和西班牙裔中,一般来说,50-64 岁年龄组和高贫困率、低 PCP 供应和非城市县的≥65 岁年龄组的发病率并没有下降(非裔美国人)。结直肠内镜筛查率在两个年龄组的白人中都显著增加,但在西班牙裔(一般为 50-64 岁,居住在高贫困县的≥65 岁)或居住在高未参保率(50-64 岁)、初级保健医生供应较少、贫困率较高和非城市县(≥65 岁)的非裔美国人中并未增加。FOBT 率在研究期间保持不变。
我们的结果表明,居住在医疗保健获取机会较低的贫困社区的个体没有经历结直肠癌发病率的降低,而这种降低使较富裕的社区受益;这些差异可能与结直肠内镜筛查的医疗保健获取障碍有关。