Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Clin Transl Gastroenterol. 2020 Dec;11(12):e00266. doi: 10.14309/ctg.0000000000000266.
Despite overall reductions in colorectal cancer (CRC) morbidity and mortality, survival disparities by sex persist among young patients (age <50 years). Our study sought to quantify variance in early-onset CRC survival accounted for by individual/community-level characteristics among a population-based cohort of US women.
Geographic hot spots-counties with high early-onset CRC mortality rates among women-were derived using 3 geospatial autocorrelation approaches with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention national mortality data. We identified women (age: 15-49 years) diagnosed with CRC from 1999 to 2016 in the National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results program. Patterns of community health behaviors by hot spot classification were assessed by Spearman correlation (ρ). Generalized R values were used to evaluate variance in survival attributed to individual/community-level features.
Approximately 1 in every 16 contiguous US counties identified as hot spots (191 of 3,108), and 52.9% of hot spot counties (n = 101) were located in the South. Among 28,790 women with early-onset CRC, 13.7% of cases (n = 3,954) resided in hot spot counties. Physical inactivity and fertility were community health behaviors that modestly correlated with hot spot residence among women with early-onset CRC (ρ = 0.21 and ρ = -0.23, respectively; P < 0.01). Together, individual/community-level features accounted for distinct variance patterns in early-onset CRC survival among women (hot spot counties: 33.8%; non-hot spot counties: 34.1%).
Individual/community-level features accounted for approximately one-third of variation in early-onset CRC survival among women and differed between hot spot vs non-hot spot counties. Understanding the impact of community health behaviors-particularly in regions with high early-onset CRC mortality rates-is critical for tailoring strategies to reduce early-onset CRC disparities.
尽管结直肠癌(CRC)的发病率和死亡率总体上有所下降,但年轻患者(<50 岁)的生存率仍存在性别差异。我们的研究旨在通过基于人群的美国女性队列,量化个体/社区水平特征对早发性 CRC 生存的影响。
使用三种地理空间自相关方法,根据疾病控制与预防中心的全国死亡率数据,得出女性早发性 CRC 死亡率较高的地理热点地区-县。我们从 1999 年至 2016 年在国立卫生研究院/国家癌症研究所的监测、流行病学和最终结果计划中确定了患有 CRC 的女性(年龄:15-49 岁)。通过 Spearman 相关性(ρ)评估热点分类的社区健康行为模式。使用广义 R 值评估归因于个体/社区水平特征的生存差异。
大约每 16 个美国相邻县中就有一个被确定为热点地区(3108 个中的 191 个),52.9%(101 个)的热点地区位于南部。在 28790 名患有早发性 CRC 的女性中,有 13.7%(3954 名)的病例居住在热点地区。身体活动不足和生育是与早发性 CRC 女性热点地区居住相关的社区健康行为(ρ=0.21 和 ρ=-0.23,分别;P<0.01)。个体/社区水平特征共同解释了女性早发性 CRC 生存的不同变异模式(热点地区:33.8%;非热点地区:34.1%)。
个体/社区水平特征占女性早发性 CRC 生存率差异的三分之一左右,并且在热点地区与非热点地区之间存在差异。了解社区健康行为的影响-特别是在早发性 CRC 死亡率较高的地区-对于制定策略以减少早发性 CRC 差异至关重要。