Section of Environment and Radiation, International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon, France.
Division of Public Health Sciences, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research.
Int J Cancer. 2021 May 1;148(9):2212-2226. doi: 10.1002/ijc.33400. Epub 2020 Dec 8.
We examined the geospatial dimension of delays to diagnosis of breast cancer in a prospective study of 1541 women newly diagnosed in the African Breast Cancer-Disparities in Outcomes (ABC-DO) Study. Women were recruited at cancer treatment facilities in Namibia, Nigeria, Uganda and Zambia. The baseline interview included information used to generate the geospatial features: urban/rural residence, travel mode to treatment facility and straight-line distances from home to first-care provider and to diagnostic/treatment facility, categorized into country/ethnicity (population)-specific quartiles. These factors were investigated in relation to delay in diagnosis (≥3 months since first symptom) and late stage at diagnosis (TNM: III, IV) using logistic regression, adjusted for population group and sociodemographic characteristics. The median (interquartile range) distances to first provider and diagnostic and treatment facilities were 5 (1-37), 17 (3-105) and 62 (5-289) km, respectively. The majority had a delay in diagnosis (74%) and diagnosis at late stage (64%). Distance to first provider was not associated with delay in diagnosis or late stage at diagnosis. Rural residence was associated with delay, but the association did not persist after adjustment for sociodemographic characteristics. Distance to the diagnostic/treatment facility was associated with delay (highest vs lowest quartile: odds ratio (OR) = 1.56, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.08-2.27) and late stage (overall: OR = 1.47, CI = 1.05-2.06; without Nigerian hospitals where mostly local residents were treated: OR = 1.73, CI = 1.18-2.54). These findings underscore the need for measures addressing the geospatial barriers to early diagnosis in sub-Saharan African settings, including providing transport or travel allowance and decentralizing diagnostic services.
我们在一项针对 1541 名新诊断为非洲乳腺癌-结局差异(ABC-DO)研究的女性的前瞻性研究中检查了乳腺癌诊断延迟的地理空间维度。女性在纳米比亚、尼日利亚、乌干达和赞比亚的癌症治疗机构招募。基线访谈包括用于生成地理空间特征的信息:城乡居住、前往治疗机构的交通方式以及从家到第一保健提供者和诊断/治疗机构的直线距离,分为按国家/种族(人群)划分的四分位数。使用逻辑回归调查这些因素与诊断延迟(自首次症状后≥3 个月)和诊断时晚期(TNM:III、IV)的关系,调整人群组和社会人口特征。中位数(四分位距)到第一提供者、诊断和治疗机构的距离分别为 5(1-37)、17(3-105)和 62(5-289)公里。大多数人有诊断延迟(74%)和晚期诊断(64%)。到第一提供者的距离与诊断延迟或晚期诊断无关。农村居住与延迟有关,但在调整社会人口特征后,这种关联并不存在。到诊断/治疗机构的距离与延迟相关(最高与最低四分位距:比值比(OR)=1.56,95%置信区间(CI)=1.08-2.27)和晚期(总体:OR=1.47,CI=1.05-2.06;不包括尼日利亚医院,那里主要治疗当地居民:OR=1.73,CI=1.18-2.54)。这些发现强调了在撒哈拉以南非洲地区需要采取措施解决地理空间障碍,以实现早期诊断,包括提供交通或旅行津贴和分散诊断服务。