Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Division of Hematology/Oncology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Cancer. 2018 Apr 15;124(8):1743-1751. doi: 10.1002/cncr.31222. Epub 2018 Jan 16.
Gene expression profiling (GEP) has been rapidly adopted for early breast cancer and can aid in chemotherapy decision making. Study results regarding racial disparities in testing are conflicting, and may reflect different care settings. To the authors' knowledge, data regarding the influence of provider factors on testing are scarce.
The authors used a statewide, multipayer, insurance claims database linked to cancer registry records to examine the impact of race and provider characteristics on GEP uptake in a cohort of patients newly diagnosed with breast cancer between 2005 and 2012. Incidence proportion models were used to examine the adjusted likelihood of testing. Models were stratified by lymph node status (N0 vs N1).
Among 11,958 eligible patients, 23% of black and 26% of non-Hispanic white patients received GEP. Among patients with N0 disease, black individuals were 16% less likely to receive testing after adjustment for clinical factors and the provider's specialty and volume of patients with breast cancer (95% confidence interval, 0.77-0.93). Adjustment for provider characteristics did not attenuate the effect of race on testing. Patients of middle-volume providers were more likely to be tested compared with those with either high-volume or low-volume providers, whereas patients seeing a medical oncologist were more likely to be tested compared with those whose only providers were from surgical specialties.
Provider volume and specialty were found to be significant predictors of GEP use, but did not explain racial disparities in testing. Further research concerning the key contributors to lagging test use among black women is needed to optimize the equitable use of GEPs and support personalized treatment decision making for all patients. Cancer 2018;124:1743-51. © 2018 American Cancer Society.
基因表达谱(GEP)已被迅速应用于早期乳腺癌,并有助于化疗决策。关于种族差异检测的研究结果相互矛盾,这可能反映了不同的护理环境。据作者所知,关于提供者因素对检测的影响的数据很少。
作者使用了一个全州性的、多付款方、与癌症登记记录相关联的保险索赔数据库,来检查种族和提供者特征对 2005 年至 2012 年间新诊断为乳腺癌的患者队列中 GEP 检测率的影响。采用发病率比例模型来检验调整后的检测可能性。根据淋巴结状态(N0 与 N1)对模型进行分层。
在 11958 名合格患者中,23%的黑人患者和 26%的非西班牙裔白人患者接受了 GEP 检测。在 N0 疾病患者中,经过临床因素和提供者的专业和乳腺癌患者数量的调整后,黑人患者接受检测的可能性降低了 16%(95%置信区间,0.77-0.93)。调整提供者特征并不能减轻种族对检测的影响。与高容量或低容量提供者相比,中等容量提供者的患者更有可能接受检测,而与仅来自外科专业的提供者相比,接受肿瘤内科医生治疗的患者更有可能接受检测。
提供者的数量和专业被发现是 GEP 使用的重要预测因素,但不能解释检测中的种族差异。需要进一步研究导致黑人女性检测滞后的关键因素,以优化 GEP 的公平使用,并支持所有患者的个性化治疗决策。癌症 2018;124:1743-51。©2018 美国癌症协会。