Suppr超能文献

在一项针对 1909 例头颈部癌症患者的全国前瞻性队列研究中,解释社会经济剥夺对生存的影响。

Explaining the effects of socio-economic deprivation on survival in a national prospective cohort study of 1909 patients with head and neck cancers.

机构信息

Beatson West of Scotland Cancer Centre, 1053 Great Western Road, Glasgow G12 0YN, UK.

出版信息

Cancer Epidemiol. 2010 Dec;34(6):682-8. doi: 10.1016/j.canep.2010.05.009. Epub 2010 Jun 16.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Socio-economic differences in survival from head and neck cancers are among the largest of any malignancies. Population-based data have been unable to explain these differences.

AIMS

To describe survival from head and neck cancers in a large cohort of patients for whom a range of socio-economic, demographic, behavioural and casemix data was available.

METHODS

Prospective cohort study using data from the Scottish Head and Neck Audit on all patients diagnosed with a head and neck cancer in Scotland between 1st September 1999 and 31st August 2001 linked to General Register Office for Scotland death records to 30th June 2006. Cox proportional hazards models were produced to describe adjusted hazards of death according to socio-economic circumstances, using validated area-based DEPCAT scores.

RESULTS

Data on 1909 patients were analysed. 71.0% were male and mean age was 64.3 (SD 12.2) years. Overall 5-year survival was 45.6% (95% CI: 43.4-47.8%). In order of strength of association in univariate regression, World Health Organisation Performance Status, disease stage, patient age, tumour site, smoking status, alcohol use, tumour differentiation, and deprivation were significant predictors of all-cause mortality but after multiple adjustment, deprivation was no longer an independent predictor of survival.

CONCLUSIONS

Socio-economic differentials in survival from head and neck cancers are determined by a mixture of risk factors, some of which may be amenable to targeted earlier detection methods and lifestyle interventions. However, further research is needed to understand the impacts of performance status in more deprived patients.

摘要

背景

头颈部癌症的生存状况存在社会经济差异,其差异程度在所有恶性肿瘤中最大。基于人群的研究尚无法解释这些差异。

目的

描述在一组大型患者队列中头颈部癌症的生存情况,这些患者具有一系列社会经济、人口统计学、行为和病例组合数据。

方法

前瞻性队列研究,使用苏格兰头颈部审计数据,纳入了 1999 年 9 月 1 日至 2001 年 8 月 31 日期间在苏格兰诊断出头颈部癌症的所有患者,这些患者的资料与苏格兰通用登记处的死亡记录相链接,随访截止日期为 2006 年 6 月 30 日。采用经过验证的基于区域的 DEPCAT 评分,根据社会经济情况,使用 Cox 比例风险模型描述调整后的死亡风险。

结果

分析了 1909 例患者的数据。71.0%为男性,平均年龄为 64.3(SD 12.2)岁。总体 5 年生存率为 45.6%(95%CI:43.4-47.8%)。在单变量回归中,按关联强度排序,世界卫生组织表现状态、疾病分期、患者年龄、肿瘤部位、吸烟状态、饮酒状态、肿瘤分化程度和贫困程度是全因死亡率的显著预测因素,但经过多因素调整后,贫困程度不再是生存的独立预测因素。

结论

头颈部癌症的生存状况存在社会经济差异,这是由一系列风险因素决定的,其中一些因素可能可以通过有针对性的早期检测方法和生活方式干预来改善。然而,需要进一步的研究来了解在贫困程度更高的患者中,表现状态的影响。

文献检索

告别复杂PubMed语法,用中文像聊天一样搜索,搜遍4000万医学文献。AI智能推荐,让科研检索更轻松。

立即免费搜索

文件翻译

保留排版,准确专业,支持PDF/Word/PPT等文件格式,支持 12+语言互译。

免费翻译文档

深度研究

AI帮你快速写综述,25分钟生成高质量综述,智能提取关键信息,辅助科研写作。

立即免费体验