Murphy M, Goldblatt P, Thornton-Jones H, Silcocks P
University of Oxford, Department of Public Health and Primary Care, Radcliffe Infirmary, UK.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 1990 Dec;44(4):293-6. doi: 10.1136/jech.44.4.293.
The aim was to investigate whether the survival of women with cancer of the uterine cervix is associated with their marital status and social class.
The study was a survey of survival up to 5 years from diagnosis of women with cancer of the cervix registered in the South Thames Cancer Registry, using Cox regression to adjust for marital status, social class, age, and stage at registration. Because of deficiencies in social class data held by the Registry (social class was assigned in only 51% of cases, as opposed to 93% for marital status), the findings were compared with survival data from the OPCS Longitudinal Study.
During the period of study (1977-81) the South Thames Cancer Registry covered a female population of about 3.5 million in the south east of England.
Data on 1728 women were analysed. MEASUREMENTS AND AND MAIN RESULTS: Apparent differences in crude survival by marital status and social class were examined. These were found to be accounted for by adjustment for age and stage. The better survival of those whose social class was unknown was found to be an artefact of the way in which cancer registries assign social class, but this did not appear to bias registry based studies of social class survival seriously.
(1) After adjusting for age, factors affecting survival in women with cancer of the cervix, such as stage at presentation or host resistance, appear to be similarly distributed in the different marital status and social class groups; (2) for cervical cancer, the marked social class gradient and unusual marital status distribution found in cross sectional mortality data reflect the incidence of the disease, not differences in survival; (3) explanations for these patterns in incidence and mortality data are to be found in the aetiology of the disease.
旨在调查子宫颈癌女性患者的生存率是否与其婚姻状况和社会阶层有关。
该研究是一项针对在南泰晤士癌症登记处登记的子宫颈癌女性患者从确诊起长达5年生存率的调查,采用Cox回归来调整婚姻状况、社会阶层、年龄及登记时的分期。由于登记处持有的社会阶层数据存在缺陷(仅51%的病例有社会阶层划分,而婚姻状况的划分比例为93%),研究结果与OPCS纵向研究的生存数据进行了比较。
在研究期间(1977 - 1981年),南泰晤士癌症登记处覆盖了英格兰东南部约350万女性人口。
对1728名女性的数据进行了分析。
研究了按婚姻状况和社会阶层划分的粗生存率的明显差异。发现这些差异可通过年龄和分期的调整得到解释。社会阶层未知者生存率较高被发现是癌症登记处划分社会阶层方式导致的假象,但这似乎并未严重影响基于登记处的社会阶层生存率研究。
(1)调整年龄后,影响子宫颈癌女性患者生存的因素,如就诊时的分期或宿主抵抗力,在不同婚姻状况和社会阶层组中的分布似乎相似;(2)对于子宫颈癌,横断面死亡率数据中显著的社会阶层梯度和异常的婚姻状况分布反映的是疾病的发病率,而非生存差异;(3)这些发病率和死亡率数据模式的解释需从疾病的病因学中寻找。