Department of Internal Medicine, University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center, the United States of America; University of New Mexico Comprehensive Cancer Center, the United States of America.
University of New Mexico Comprehensive Cancer Center, the United States of America.
Cancer Epidemiol. 2022 Oct;80:102229. doi: 10.1016/j.canep.2022.102229. Epub 2022 Jul 21.
Studies of race-specific colon cancer (CC) survival differences between right- vs. left-sided CC typically focus on Black and White persons and often consider all CC stages as one group. To more completely examine potential racial and ethnic disparities in side- and stage-specific survival, we evaluated 5-year CC cause-specific survival probabilities for five racial/ethnic groups by anatomic site (right or left colon) and stage (local, regional, distant).
We obtained cause-specific survival probability estimates from National Cancer Institute's population-based Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) for CC patients grouped by five racial/ethnic groups (Non-Hispanic American Indian/Alaska Native [AIAN], Non-Hispanic Asian/Pacific Islander [API], Hispanic, Non-Hispanic Black [NHB], and Non-Hispanic White [NHW]), anatomic site, stage, and other patient and SEER registry characteristics. We used meta-regression approaches to identify factors that explained differences in cause-specific survival.
Diagnoses of distant-stage CC were more common among NHB and AIAN persons (>22 %) than among NHW and API persons (< 20 %). Large disparities in anatomic site-specific survival were not apparent. Those with right-sided distant-stage CC had a one-year cause-specific survival probability that was 16.4 % points lower (99 % CI: 12.2-20.6) than those with left-sided distant-stage CC; this difference decreased over follow-up. Cause-specific survival probabilities were highest for API, and lowest for NHB, persons, though these differences varied substantially by stage at diagnosis. AIAN persons with localized-stage CC, and NHB persons with regional- and distant-stage CC, had significantly lower survival probabilities across follow-up.
There are differences in CC presentation according to anatomic site and disease stage among patients of distinct racial and ethnic backgrounds. This, coupled with the reality that there are persistent survival disparities, with NHB and AIAN persons experiencing worse prognosis, suggests that there are social or structural determinants of these disparities. Further research is needed to confirm whether these CC cause-specific survival disparities are due to differences in risk factors, screening patterns, cancer treatment, or surveillance, in order to overcome the existing differences in outcome.
关于右侧结肠癌(CC)与左侧结肠癌(CC)特定种族生存差异的研究通常集中在黑人和白人身上,并且通常将所有 CC 阶段视为一个整体。为了更全面地检查种族和民族在特定部位和特定阶段的生存方面的潜在差异,我们通过解剖部位(右结肠或左结肠)和阶段(局部、区域、远处)评估了五个种族/族裔群体的 5 年 CC 特定原因的生存概率。
我们从美国国立癌症研究所基于人群的监测、流行病学和最终结果(SEER)中获得了按五个种族/族裔群体(非西班牙裔美洲印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民[AIAN]、非西班牙裔亚洲/太平洋岛民[API]、西班牙裔、非西班牙裔黑人[NHB]和非西班牙裔白人[NHW])、解剖部位、阶段和其他患者和 SEER 登记特征分组的 CC 患者的特定原因生存概率估计。我们使用荟萃回归方法来确定解释特定原因生存差异的因素。
非西班牙裔黑人(NHB)和美洲印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民(AIAN)人群中远处阶段 CC 的诊断更为常见(>22%),而非西班牙裔白人(NHW)和亚洲/太平洋岛民(API)人群中则较少(<20%)。特定解剖部位的生存差异并不明显。右远处阶段 CC 的患者一年特定原因的生存概率比左远处阶段 CC 的患者低 16.4 个百分点(99%CI:12.2-20.6);随着随访的进行,这种差异逐渐减小。API 患者的特定原因生存概率最高,而非西班牙裔黑人(NHB)患者的生存概率最低,尽管这些差异在诊断时的阶段上有很大差异。局部阶段 CC 的 AIAN 患者,以及区域和远处阶段 CC 的非西班牙裔黑人(NHB)患者,在整个随访期间的生存概率显著较低。
在不同种族和族裔背景的患者中,CC 的表现根据解剖部位和疾病阶段而有所不同。再加上仍然存在持续的生存差异,非西班牙裔黑人(NHB)和美洲印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民(AIAN)患者的预后较差,这表明存在社会或结构决定因素导致了这些差异。为了克服现有的结果差异,需要进一步研究以确定这些 CC 特定原因的生存差异是否是由于危险因素、筛查模式、癌症治疗或监测的差异造成的。