Gerhard Robert Steven, Patil Dattatraya, Liu Yuan, Ogan Kenneth, Alemozaffar Mehrdad, Jani Ashesh B, Kucuk Omer N, Master Viraj A, Gillespie Theresa W, Filson Christopher P
Department of Urology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA.
Winship Cancer Institute, Emory University, Atlanta, GA; Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Emory University, Atlanta, GA.
Urol Oncol. 2017 May;35(5):250-256. doi: 10.1016/j.urolonc.2016.12.004. Epub 2017 Jan 12.
We characterized factors related to nondefinitive management (NDM) of patients with high-risk prostate cancer and assessed impact from race, insurance status, and facility-level volume of technologically advanced prostate cancer treatments (i.e., intensity-modulated radiation therapy, robotic-assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy) on this outcome.
We identified men with high-risk localized prostate cancer (based on D׳Amico criteria) in the National Cancer Database (2010-2012). Primary outcome was NDM (i.e., delayed/no treatment with prostatectomy/radiation therapy or androgen-deprivation monotherapy). Treating facilities were classified by quartiles of proportions of patients treated with advanced technology. Multivariable regression estimated odds of primary outcome based on race, insurance status, and facility-level technology use, and evaluated for interactions between these covariates.
Among 60,300 patients, 9,265 (15.4%) received NDM. This was more common among non-White men (P<0.001), Medicaid/uninsured patients (P<0.001), and those managed at facilities in the lowest quartile of technology use (25.1% vs. 11.0% highest, P<0.001). Though NDM was common among non-White men with Medicaid/no insurance treated at low-technology centers (43% vs. 10% White, private/Medicare, high-tech facility; adjusted odds ratios = 7.18, P<0.001), this was less likely if this group was managed at a high-tech hospital (22% vs. 43% low-tech, P<0.001).
Technology use at a facility correlates with high-quality prostate cancer care and is associated with diminished disparities based on insurance status and patient race. More research is required to characterize other facility-level factors explaining these findings.
我们对高危前列腺癌患者非确定性治疗(NDM)的相关因素进行了特征分析,并评估了种族、保险状况以及技术先进的前列腺癌治疗(即调强放射治疗、机器人辅助腹腔镜根治性前列腺切除术)的机构层面治疗量对此结果的影响。
我们在国家癌症数据库(2010 - 2012年)中识别出高危局限性前列腺癌男性患者(基于达米科标准)。主要结局为非确定性治疗(即延迟/未进行前列腺切除术/放射治疗或雄激素剥夺单一疗法)。治疗机构按接受先进技术治疗患者比例的四分位数进行分类。多变量回归基于种族、保险状况和机构层面的技术使用情况估计主要结局的比值比,并评估这些协变量之间的相互作用。
在60300例患者中,9265例(15.4%)接受了非确定性治疗。这在非白人男性(P<0.001)、医疗补助/无保险患者(P<0.001)以及在技术使用处于最低四分位数的机构接受治疗的患者中更为常见(25.1%对最高四分位数的11.0%,P<0.001)。虽然在低技术中心接受治疗的有医疗补助/无保险的非白人男性中,非确定性治疗很常见(43%对白人、有私人保险/医疗保险的高科技机构的10%;调整后的比值比 = 7.18,P<0.001),但如果该组患者在高科技医院接受治疗,这种情况的可能性较小(22%对低技术医院的43%,P<0.001)。
机构层面的技术使用与高质量的前列腺癌护理相关,并且与基于保险状况和患者种族的差异减少有关。需要更多研究来确定解释这些发现的其他机构层面因素。