Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, Rm 443 727 McDermot Ave, Winnipeg, MP, R3E 3P5, Canada.
ICES, 2075 Bayview Ave, Toronto, ON, M4N 3M5, Canada.
BMC Cancer. 2020 May 27;20(1):476. doi: 10.1186/s12885-020-06943-w.
Advanced cancer stage at diagnosis may explain high cancer mortality among patients with a severe psychiatric illness (SPI). Studies to date investigating advanced stage cancer at diagnosis as a potential explanation for high cancer mortality in individuals with a history of mental illness have been inconclusive. We examined the relationship between a SPI history and unknown cancer stage at diagnosis in colorectal cancer (CRC) patients.
This was a population-based, cross-sectional study using linked administrative databases of CRC patients diagnosed between 01/04/2007 and 31/12/2012. Individuals who had a history of mental illness but did not meet the definition of a SPI were excluded. An SPI was measured in the 5 years prior to the cancer diagnosis and categorized as inpatient, outpatient or no SPI. Individuals with a best stage in Stage 0 to Stage IV were considered staged and absence of staging information was defined as unknown stage. The risk of unknown stage cancer was estimated using modified Poisson regression.
The final study cohort included 24,507 CRC patients. 258 (1.1%) individuals experienced a history of inpatient SPI and 482 (2.0%) experienced outpatient SPI. After adjusting for confounders, CRC patients with an inpatient or outpatient history of SPI were at greater risk of having missing TNM stage at diagnosis, compared to patients with no history of a mental illness (RR 1.45 (95% CI: 1.14-1.85) and RR1.17 (95% CI 0.95-1.43), respectively). The results did not change when alternate practices to assign SPI history using administrative data were used.
Individuals with an SPI, especially those with a psychiatric admission, were more likely to have missing stage data compared to individuals without a history of a mental illness. Incomplete and low quality cancer staging data likely undermines the quality of cancer care following initial diagnosis. Understanding why patients with an SPI are missing this information is a critical first step to providing excellent care to this vulnerable population.
在诊断时处于癌症晚期可能是导致患有严重精神疾病(SPI)的患者癌症死亡率高的原因。迄今为止,研究发现,患有精神疾病史的个体癌症死亡率高可能与癌症晚期诊断有关,但结果尚无定论。本研究旨在探讨 SPI 史与结直肠癌(CRC)患者诊断时未知癌症分期之间的关系。
这是一项基于人群的横断面研究,使用了 2007 年 4 月 1 日至 2012 年 12 月 31 日期间诊断为 CRC 的患者的相关行政数据库进行链接。排除有精神病史但不符合 SPI 定义的个体。SPI 在癌症诊断前 5 年内进行测量,并分为住院、门诊或无 SPI。将最佳分期为 0 期至 4 期的患者视为分期患者,分期信息缺失则定义为未知分期。采用校正泊松回归模型估计未知分期癌症的风险。
最终纳入了 24507 例 CRC 患者。258 例(1.1%)患者有住院 SPI 史,482 例(2.0%)患者有门诊 SPI 史。校正混杂因素后,与无精神疾病史的患者相比,有住院或门诊 SPI 史的 CRC 患者诊断时缺失 TNM 分期的风险更高(RR 1.45 [95%CI:1.14-1.85] 和 RR1.17 [95%CI 0.95-1.43])。使用行政数据替代 SPI 史赋值方法的结果没有改变。
与无精神疾病史的患者相比,有 SPI 史的个体,尤其是有精神科住院史的个体,更有可能出现分期数据缺失的情况。不完整和低质量的癌症分期数据可能会降低初始诊断后癌症治疗的质量。了解 SPI 患者缺失这些信息的原因是为这一脆弱人群提供优质护理的关键第一步。