David Yakira, Ottaviano Lorenzo, Park Jihye, Iqbal Sadat, Likhtshteyn Michelle, Kumar Samir, Lyo Helen, Lewis Ayanna E, Lung Brandon E, Frye Jesse T, Huang Li, Li Ellen, Yang Jie, Martello Laura, Vignesh Shivakumar, Miller Joshua D, Follen Michele, Grossman Evan B
Department of Medicine, SUNY Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, New York, United States of America (USA) 11203.
Department of Gastroenterology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, 1 Gustave Levy Place, New York, USA 10025.
J Cancer Ther. 2019 Apr;10(4):269-289. doi: 10.4236/jct.2019.104022. Epub 2019 Apr 9.
The incidence and mortality of colorectal cancer is persistently highest in Black/African-Americans in the United States. While access to care, barriers to screening, and poverty might explain these findings, there is increased interest in examining biological factors that impact the colonic environment. Our group is examining biologic factors that contribute to disparities in development of adenomas prospectively. In preparation for this and to characterize a potential patient population, we conducted a retrospective review of initial screening colonoscopies in a cohort of patients.
A retrospective review was performed on initial average risk screening colonoscopies on patients (age 45-75 years) during 2012 at three institutions. Descriptive statistics and multivariable logistic regression models were used to examine the relationship between potential risk factors and the detection of adenomas.
Of the 2225 initial screening colonoscopies 1495 (67.2%) were performed on Black/African-Americans and 566 (25.4%) on Caucasians. Multivariable logistic regression revealed that older age, male sex, current smoking and teaching gastroenterologists were associated with higher detection of adenomas and these were less prevalent among Black/African-Americas except for age. Neither race, ethnicity, BMI, diabetes mellitus, HIV nor insurance were associated with adenoma detection.
In this sample, there was no association between race and adenoma detection. While this may be due to a lower prevalence of risk factors for adenomas in this sample, our findings were confounded by a lower detection rate by consultant gastroenterologists at one institution. The study allowed us to rectify the problem and characterize patients for future trials.
在美国,黑人/非裔美国人的结直肠癌发病率和死亡率一直居高不下。虽然获得医疗服务的机会、筛查障碍和贫困可能解释了这些结果,但人们越来越关注影响结肠环境的生物学因素。我们的研究小组正在前瞻性地研究导致腺瘤发生差异的生物学因素。为了为此做准备并描述潜在的患者群体,我们对一组患者的初次筛查结肠镜检查进行了回顾性研究。
对2012年在三个机构接受初次平均风险筛查结肠镜检查的患者(年龄45 - 75岁)进行回顾性研究。使用描述性统计和多变量逻辑回归模型来研究潜在风险因素与腺瘤检测之间的关系。
在2225例初次筛查结肠镜检查中,1495例(67.2%)是对黑人/非裔美国人进行的,566例(25.4%)是对白人进行的。多变量逻辑回归显示,年龄较大、男性、当前吸烟以及教学胃肠病学家与腺瘤检测率较高相关,除年龄外,这些因素在黑人/非裔美国人中不太普遍。种族、族裔、体重指数、糖尿病、艾滋病毒和保险均与腺瘤检测无关。
在这个样本中,种族与腺瘤检测之间没有关联。虽然这可能是由于该样本中腺瘤风险因素的患病率较低,但我们的研究结果因一个机构的顾问胃肠病学家检测率较低而受到混淆。这项研究使我们能够纠正问题并为未来的试验描述患者特征。