Deb Sayantan, Pendharkar Arjun Vivek, Schoen Matthew K, Altekruse Sean, Ratliff John, Desai Atman
Stanford University School of Medicine, 213 Quarry Rd MC5958, Stanford, CA, 94305, USA.
Surveillance Research Program, National Cancer Institute, Rockville, MD, USA.
J Neurooncol. 2017 May;132(3):447-453. doi: 10.1007/s11060-017-2391-2. Epub 2017 Mar 3.
Socioeconomic status (SES) is associated with survival in many cancers but the effect of socioeconomic status on survival and access to care for patients with gliomas has not been well studied. This study included 50,170 patients from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program at the National Cancer Institute database diagnosed with gliomas of the brain from 2003 to 2012. Patient SES was divided into tertiles and quintiles. Treatment options included radiation, surgery (gross total resection (GTR)/other surgery), and radiation with surgery. Multivariable logistic regression and Cox proportional hazards model were used to analyze data with SAS v9.4. The results were adjusted for age at diagnosis, race, sex, tumor type, and tumor grade. Kaplan-Meier survival curves were constructed according to SES tertiles and quintiles. Patients from a higher SES tertile were significantly more likely to receive surgery, radiation, GTR, and radiation with surgery (OR 1.092, 1.116, 1.103, 1.150 respectively, all p < 0.0001). This correlation was also true when patients were divided into quintiles (OR 1.054, 1.072, 1.062, 1.089 respectively, all p < 0.0001). Furthermore, the lowest SES tertiles (HR 1.258, 1.146) and the lowest SES quintiles (HR 1.301, 1.273, 1.194, 1.119) were associated with significantly shorter survival times (all p for trend <0.0001). Surgery, radiation therapy, surgery with radiation therapy, and GTR were also found to be associated with improved overall survival in glioma patients (HR 0.553, 0.849, 0.666, 0.491 respectively, all p < 0.0001). The findings from this national study suggest an effect of SES on access to treatment, and survival in patients with gliomas.
社会经济地位(SES)与多种癌症的生存率相关,但社会经济地位对神经胶质瘤患者生存率及获得医疗服务的影响尚未得到充分研究。本研究纳入了美国国立癌症研究所数据库监测、流行病学和最终结果计划中的50170例患者,这些患者在2003年至2012年期间被诊断为脑胶质瘤。患者的社会经济地位分为三分位数和五分位数。治疗选择包括放疗、手术(全切术(GTR)/其他手术)以及放疗联合手术。使用SAS v9.4软件通过多变量逻辑回归和Cox比例风险模型对数据进行分析。结果根据诊断时的年龄、种族、性别、肿瘤类型和肿瘤分级进行了调整。根据社会经济地位三分位数和五分位数构建了Kaplan-Meier生存曲线。社会经济地位较高三分位数的患者接受手术、放疗、全切术以及放疗联合手术的可能性显著更高(OR分别为1.092、1.116、1.103、1.150,均p < 0.0001)。当将患者分为五分位数时,这种相关性同样成立(OR分别为1.054、1.072、1.062、1.089,均p < 0.0001)。此外,社会经济地位最低的三分位数(HR为1.258、1.146)和社会经济地位最低的五分位数(HR为1.301、1.273、1.194、1.119)与显著缩短的生存时间相关(所有趋势p < 0.0001)。还发现手术、放射治疗、手术联合放射治疗以及全切术与神经胶质瘤患者总体生存率的提高相关(HR分别为0.553、0.849、0.666、0.491,均p < 0.0001)。这项全国性研究的结果表明社会经济地位对神经胶质瘤患者获得治疗及生存率有影响。