Epidemiology & Genetics Unit, Department of Health Sciences, University of York, York YO10 5DD, United Kingdom.
Eur J Cancer. 2012 Jan;48(2):263-9. doi: 10.1016/j.ejca.2011.10.007.
Survival from childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) has continued to improve in economically-developed regions of the world, but 20% of patients still die within 5-years of diagnosis. Treatment is prolonged and complex; and as survival rates plateau, factors relating to socio-economic status and/or treatment adherence are increasingly scrutinised as potentially important determinants of outcome.
Predicated on the frame-work of the United Kingdom (UK) NHS, the relationship between socio-demographic factors and ALL survival is examined here using data from a large follow-up study conducted in the 1990s. One thousand five hundred and fifty nine children (0-14 years) diagnosed in England, Scotland &Wales during the era of the national UKALL XI randomized-controlled trial (RCT) were followed-up for an average of 15.9 years (20,826.3 person-years). Area-based deprivation scores and father's occupational social class at the time of the child's birth were used as markers of socio-economic status. Information on deaths was obtained from the NHS Information Centre for Health and Social Care. All children were included in the analyses, irrespective of RCT enrolment or participation in the founding epidemiological study (www.UKCCS.org).Survival effects were assessed using proportional hazards regressions models.
Survival varied with both area-based deprivation at diagnosis (hazard ratio (HR) 1.29; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.05-1.57) and fathers occupational social class at birth (HR 1.12; 95% CI 0.97-1.29); the divergence beginning 6-9 months after diagnosis, and widening thereafter during home-administered therapy. The findings became more marked when analyses were restricted to those enrolled in UKALL XI (n = 1341). As expected, survival differences were also observed with sex, and age at diagnosis.
The existence of significant social disparities in ALL survival, which are not due to treatment accessibility, is of major clinical importance. Trends should be monitored and further research into potentially modifiable risk factors conducted.
在世界经济发达地区,儿童急性淋巴细胞白血病(ALL)的生存率持续提高,但仍有 20%的患者在诊断后 5 年内死亡。治疗过程漫长而复杂;随着生存率趋于稳定,与社会经济地位和/或治疗依从性相关的因素越来越被视为影响预后的重要决定因素。
本研究以英国国民保健制度(NHS)为框架,利用 20 世纪 90 年代开展的一项大型随访研究的数据,探讨了社会人口因素与 ALL 生存率之间的关系。在英国 ALL XI 随机对照试验(RCT)期间,在英格兰、苏格兰和威尔士诊断出的 1559 名 0-14 岁儿童(20826.3 人年)进行了平均 15.9 年的随访。以儿童出生时的地区贫困评分和父亲职业社会阶层作为社会经济地位的标志物。通过英国国家卫生服务信息中心获取死亡信息。所有儿童均纳入分析,无论其是否参加 RCT 或参与基础的流行病学研究(www.UKCCS.org)。使用比例风险回归模型评估生存效应。
生存与诊断时的地区贫困程度(危险比(HR)1.29;95%置信区间(CI)1.05-1.57)和父亲出生时的职业社会阶层(HR 1.12;95%CI 0.97-1.29)相关;这种差异从诊断后 6-9 个月开始出现,并在随后的家庭治疗期间逐渐扩大。当分析仅限于参加 UKALL XI 的患者(n=1341)时,结果更为显著。正如预期的那样,性别和诊断时的年龄也与生存率存在差异。
ALL 生存率存在显著的社会差异,且这些差异并非由于治疗的可及性造成,这具有重要的临床意义。应监测趋势,并进一步研究潜在可改变的风险因素。