Chen Leon M, Li Guojun, Reitzel Lorraine R, Pytynia Kristen B, Zafereo Mark E, Wei Qingyi, Sturgis Erich M
Department of Head and Neck Surgery, The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Cancer Prev Res (Phila). 2009 Sep;2(9):782-91. doi: 10.1158/1940-6207.CAPR-09-0154. Epub 2009 Sep 8.
It is unknown whether population-level racial or ethnic disparities in mortality from squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (SCCHN) also occur in the setting of standardized multidisciplinary-team directed care. Therefore, we conducted a matched-pair study that controlled for several potentially confounding prognostic variables to assess whether a difference in survival exists for African American or Hispanic American compared with non-Hispanic white American SCCHN patients receiving similar care. Matched pairs were 81 African American case and 81 non-Hispanic white control patients and 100 Hispanic American cases and 100 matched non-Hispanic white controls selected from 1,833 patients of a prospective epidemiologic study of incident SCCHN within a single, large multidisciplinary cancer center. Matching variables included age (+/-10 years), sex, smoking status (never versus ever), site, tumor stage (T(1-2) versus T(3-4)), nodal status (negative versus positive), and treatment. Cases and controls were not significantly different in proportions of comorbidity score, alcohol use, subsite distribution, overall stage, or tumor grade. Matched-pair and log-rank analyses showed no significant differences between cases and controls in recurrence-free, disease-specific, or overall survival. Site-specific analyses suggested that more aggressive oropharyngeal cancers occurred more frequently in minority than in non-Hispanic white patients. We conclude that minority and non-Hispanic white SCCHN patients receiving similar multidisciplinary-team directed care at a tertiary cancer center have similar survival results overall. These results encourage reducing health disparities in SCCHN through public-health efforts to improve access to multidisciplinary oncologic care (and to preventive measures) and through individual clinician efforts to make the best multidisciplinary cancer treatment choices available for their minority patients. The subgroup finding suggests a biologically based racial/ethnic disparity among oropharyngeal patients and that prevention and treatment strategies should be tailored to different populations of these patients.
在标准化多学科团队指导护理的情况下,头颈部鳞状细胞癌(SCCHN)死亡率在人群层面是否存在种族或民族差异尚不清楚。因此,我们进行了一项配对研究,控制了几个可能产生混淆的预后变量,以评估接受类似护理的非裔美国或西班牙裔美国SCCHN患者与非西班牙裔美国白人患者在生存方面是否存在差异。配对组包括从一个大型多学科癌症中心对SCCHN进行的前瞻性流行病学研究的1833名患者中选取的81例非裔美国病例和81例非西班牙裔白人对照患者,以及100例西班牙裔美国病例和100例匹配的非西班牙裔白人对照。匹配变量包括年龄(±10岁)、性别、吸烟状况(从不吸烟与曾经吸烟)、部位、肿瘤分期(T(1 - 2)与T(3 - 4))、淋巴结状况(阴性与阳性)以及治疗。病例组和对照组在合并症评分比例、饮酒情况、亚部位分布、总体分期或肿瘤分级方面无显著差异。配对组和对数秩分析显示,病例组和对照组在无复发生存期、疾病特异性生存期或总生存期方面无显著差异。特定部位分析表明,侵袭性更强的口咽癌在少数族裔患者中比在非西班牙裔白人患者中更常见。我们得出结论,在三级癌症中心接受类似多学科团队指导护理的少数族裔和非西班牙裔白人SCCHN患者总体生存结果相似。这些结果鼓励通过公共卫生努力改善获得多学科肿瘤护理(以及预防措施)的机会,并通过个体临床医生努力为其少数族裔患者提供最佳多学科癌症治疗选择,来减少SCCHN中的健康差异。亚组研究结果表明口咽癌患者中存在基于生物学的种族/民族差异,预防和治疗策略应针对这些患者的不同人群进行调整。