Survivorship and Inequality in Cancer, Danish Cancer Society Research Center, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Danish Research Center for Equality in Cancer (COMPAS), Department of Clinical Oncology & Palliative Care, Zealand University Hospital, Næstved, Denmark.
Acta Oncol. 2022 Nov;61(11):1317-1331. doi: 10.1080/0284186X.2022.2143278. Epub 2022 Nov 11.
Despite structural and cultural similarities across the Nordic countries, differences in cancer survival remain. With a focus on similarities and differences between the Nordic countries, we investigated the association between socioeconomic position (SEP) and stage at diagnosis, anticancer treatment and cancer survival to describe patterns, explore underlying mechanisms and identify knowledge gaps in the Nordic countries.
We conducted a systematic review of population based observational studies. A systematic search in PubMed, EMBASE and Medline up till May 2021 was performed, and titles, abstracts and full texts were screened for eligibility by two investigators independently. We extracted estimates of the association between SEP defined as education or income and cancer stage at diagnosis, received anticancer treatment or survival for adult patients with cancer in the Nordic countries. Further, we extracted information on study characteristics, confounding variables, cancer type and results in the available measurements with corresponding confidence intervals (CI) and/or p-values. Results were synthesized in forest plots.
From the systematic literature search, we retrieved 3629 studies, which were screened for eligibility, and could include 98 studies for data extraction. Results showed a clear pattern across the Nordic countries of socioeconomic inequality in terms of advanced stage at diagnosis, less favorable treatment and lower cause-specific and overall survival among people with lower SEP, regardless of whether SEP was measured as education or income.
Despite gaps in the literature, the consistency in results across cancer types, countries and cancer outcomes shows a clear pattern of systematic socioeconomic inequality in cancer stage, treatment and survival in the Nordic countries. Stage and anticancer treatment explain some, but not all of the observed inequality in overall and cause-specific survival. The need for further studies describing this association may therefore be limited, warranting next step research into interventions to reduce inequality in cancer outcomes.
Prospero protocol no: CRD42020166296.
尽管北欧国家在结构和文化上存在相似之处,但癌症生存率仍存在差异。本研究聚焦于北欧国家之间的异同,旨在调查社会经济地位(SEP)与诊断时的癌症分期、抗癌治疗和癌症生存之间的关联,以描述模式、探讨潜在机制,并确定北欧国家在这方面的知识差距。
我们对基于人群的观察性研究进行了系统综述。通过在 PubMed、EMBASE 和 Medline 上进行系统检索,直至 2021 年 5 月,两名研究人员独立筛选标题、摘要和全文以确定其是否符合纳入标准。我们提取了北欧国家成人癌症患者的 SEP(定义为教育或收入)与癌症分期、接受抗癌治疗或生存之间关联的估计值,并提取了研究特征、混杂变量、癌症类型和可用测量结果的信息,包括相应的置信区间(CI)和/或 p 值。结果以森林图形式进行综合。
从系统文献检索中,我们检索到 3629 项研究,并对其进行了资格筛选,最终可纳入 98 项研究进行数据提取。结果表明,无论 SEP 是通过教育还是收入来衡量,在北欧国家,社会经济地位较低的人群在诊断时处于晚期、接受治疗的效果较差以及特异性和总体生存率较低,存在明显的社会经济不平等现象。
尽管文献存在差距,但不同癌症类型、国家和癌症结局的结果一致性表明,在北欧国家,癌症分期、治疗和生存方面存在系统性的社会经济不平等。分期和抗癌治疗解释了部分而非全部观察到的总体和特异性生存不平等。因此,进一步描述这种关联的研究需求可能有限,需要进一步研究干预措施以减少癌症结局的不平等。
PROSPERO 方案编号:CRD42020166296。