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家族性结直肠癌史患者结肠镜筛查中持续存在的种族差异。

Persisting Racial Disparities in Colonoscopy Screening of Persons with a Family History of Colorectal Cancer.

机构信息

Department of Health Services Policy and Management, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, 29208, USA.

Department of Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition, University of Minnesota, 406 Delaware St. SE MMC 36, Minneapolis, MN, 55455, USA.

出版信息

J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2018 Aug;5(4):737-746. doi: 10.1007/s40615-017-0418-1. Epub 2017 Aug 15.

Abstract

With 23 and 47% higher colorectal cancer (CRC) incidence and mortality, respectively, among African Americans vs. Whites, CRC screening studies are important. Screening guidelines recommend 5-yearly colonoscopy screening of persons with a family history of CRC (first-degree relatives, FDRs), beginning at 40 years of age. For this elevated-risk group, colonoscopy screening is preferred because of the risk of more aggressive cancer that may elude early detection by other methods. African Americans with a family history of CRC are at the intersection of two elevated risk demographics, race and FDR status. This study explored racial disparities in colonoscopy screening of FDRs using 2005, 2010, and 2015 national survey data on 3220 Whites and 466 African Americans.Despite increasing colonoscopy rates among FDRs (72.3 and 62.2% in 2015 among Whites and African Americans, respectively), the 40-49 age group showed substantial racial disparities each year, persisting through 2015 (58.8, 31.7, and 35.3% lower among African Americans in 2005, 2010, and 2015, respectively). Adjusted analysis of the pooled 3-year sample showed that FDRs aged 40-49 years had one-third the colonoscopy likelihood of the 50-plus age group. African Americans without college education were 40 and 60% less likely than Whites without college and with college education, respectively, to have had a colonoscopy. The sustained, high screening disparity, and low colonoscopy rates in the 40-49 age group overall, call for novel approaches to reduce CRC mortality disparities, such as, patient navigation programs to reach out to younger FDRs, particularly, less educated African Americans.

摘要

非裔美国人的结直肠癌(CRC)发病率和死亡率分别比白人高 23%和 47%,因此 CRC 筛查研究非常重要。筛查指南建议,有 CRC 家族史(一级亲属,FDRs)的人群应从 40 岁开始每 5 年进行一次结肠镜筛查。对于这个高风险人群,由于其他方法可能无法早期发现更具侵袭性的癌症,因此首选结肠镜筛查。有 CRC 家族史的非裔美国人处于种族和 FDR 状态这两个高风险因素的交叉点。本研究使用 2005、2010 和 2015 年全国调查数据,对 3220 名白人患者和 466 名非裔美国人患者的 FDR 结肠镜筛查情况进行了分析,探讨了种族差异。尽管 FDR 接受结肠镜检查的比例有所增加(2015 年白人患者和非裔美国人患者的比例分别为 72.3%和 62.2%),但每年 40-49 岁年龄组仍存在显著的种族差异,一直持续到 2015 年(2005 年、2010 年和 2015 年,非裔美国人患者的比例分别低 58.8%、31.7%和 35.3%)。对 3 年样本的调整分析表明,40-49 岁 FDR 进行结肠镜检查的可能性是 50 岁以上人群的三分之一。没有大学学历的非裔美国人进行结肠镜检查的可能性分别比没有大学学历和有大学学历的白人低 40%和 60%。总体而言,40-49 岁年龄组的持续高筛查差异和低结肠镜检查率,需要采取新的方法来降低 CRC 死亡率的差异,例如,患者导航计划,以接触到年轻的 FDRs,特别是受教育程度较低的非裔美国人。

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