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印度儿童癌症中的性别差异:一项多中心个体患者数据分析

Sex disparity in childhood cancer in India: a multi-centre, individual patient data analysis.

作者信息

Bhatia Kanu Priya, Ganguly Shuvadeep, Sasi Archana, Kumar Vivek, Deo Suryanarayana, Agarwala Sandeep, Radhakrishnan Venkatraman, Swaminathan Rajaraman, Kapoor Gauri, Manoharan Nalliah, Malhotra Sumit, Pushpam Deepam, Bakhshi Sameer

机构信息

Department of Medical Oncology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India.

Department of Paediatrics, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India.

出版信息

Lancet Oncol. 2023 Jan;24(1):54-63. doi: 10.1016/S1470-2045(22)00688-X. Epub 2022 Nov 28.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Sex disparity and its determinants in childhood cancer in India remain unexplored, with scarce information available through summary statistics of cancer registries. This study analysed the degree of sex bias in childhood cancer in India and its clinical and demographical associations.

METHODS

In this retrospective, multicentre cohort study, we collected individual data of children (aged 0-19 years) with cancer extracted from the hospital-based records of three cancer centres in India between Jan 1, 2005, and Dec 31, 2019, and two population-based cancer registries (PBCRs; Delhi [between Jan 1, 2005, and Dec 31, 2014] and Madras Metropolitan Tumour Registry [between Jan 1, 2005, and Dec 31, 2017]). We extracted data on age, sex, and confirmed diagnosis of malignancy (according to the International Classification of Diseases-10 coding),and excluded participants if they were without a recorded diagnosis, had a benign diagnosis, had missing sex information, resided outside of India, or were a donor for haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). The primary outcome was the male-to-female incidence rate ratio (MF-IRR) in the two PBCRs and the male-to-female ratios (MFR) from the hospital-based and the HSCT data. For PBCR data, MF-IRR was estimated by dividing the MFR by the total population at risk. MFR was analysed for patients seeking treatment at the cancer centres and for those undergoing HSCT. Logistic regression analyses were done to explore the association of clinical and demographical variables with sex of the patients seeking treatment and those undergoing HSCT in hospital-based data and multivariable analyses were done to determine independent sociodemographic predictors of sex bias. Annual time trends of MFR and MF-IRR during the 15-year study period were ascertained by time series regression analyses.

FINDINGS

We included 11 375 children from PBCRs in the study. 26 891 children from hospital-based records were screened, and data from 22 893 (85·1%) were included (including 514 who underwent HSCT). Residence details were missing for 257 (1·1%) of 22 893 patients from hospital-based records. The crude MFR of children at diagnosis was in favour of boys: 2·00 (95% CI 1·92-2·09) in the Delhi PBCR and 1·44 (1·32-1·57) in Madras Metropolitan Tumour Registry. The MF-IRRs for cancer diagnosis were also skewed in favour of boys in both PBCRs (Delhi 1·69 [95% CI 1·61-1·76]; Madras Metropolitan Tumour Registry 1·37 [1·26-1·49]). The MFR for children seeking treatment from hospital-based records was 2·06 (95% CI 2·00-2·12) in favour of boys. In subgroup analyses, the proportion of boys seeking treatment was higher in northern India than southern India (p<0·0001); in private centres than in centres providing subsidised treatment (p<0·0001); in patients with haematological malignancies than those with solid malignancies (p<0·0001); in those residing 100 km or further from the hospital than those within 100 km of a hospital (p<0·0001); and those living in rural areas than those living in urban areas (p=0·0006). The MFR of 514 children who underwent HSCT was 2·81 (95% CI 2·32-3·43) in favour of boys. Time trend analysis showed that MFR did not show any significant annual change in either the overall cohort or in any of the individual centres for hospital-based data; however, the analysis did show a declining MF-IRR in the Delhi PBCR from 2005 to 2014 (p=0·031).

INTERPRETATION

The sex ratio for childhood cancer in India has a bias towards boys at the level of diagnosis, which is more pronounced in northern India and in situations demanding greater financial commitment. Addressing societal sex bias and enhancing affordable health care for girls should be pursued simultaneously in India.

FUNDING

None.

TRANSLATION

For the Hindi translation of the abstract see Supplementary Materials section.

摘要

背景

印度儿童癌症中的性别差异及其决定因素尚未得到充分研究,通过癌症登记处的汇总统计数据获得的信息也很少。本研究分析了印度儿童癌症中的性别偏见程度及其临床和人口统计学关联。

方法

在这项回顾性多中心队列研究中,我们收集了2005年1月1日至2019年12月31日期间从印度三个癌症中心的医院记录以及两个基于人群的癌症登记处(PBCR;德里[2005年1月1日至2014年12月31日]和马德拉斯大都市肿瘤登记处[2005年1月1日至2017年12月31日])中提取的0至19岁癌症儿童的个体数据。我们提取了年龄、性别和确诊的恶性肿瘤(根据国际疾病分类第10版编码)的数据,如果参与者没有记录的诊断、诊断为良性、缺少性别信息、居住在印度境外或为造血干细胞移植(HSCT)供体,则将其排除。主要结局是两个PBCR中的男女发病率比(MF-IRR)以及基于医院的数据和HSCT数据中的男女比例(MFR)。对于PBCR数据,MF-IRR通过将MFR除以处于危险中的总人口来估计。对在癌症中心寻求治疗的患者和接受HSCT的患者的MFR进行了分析。进行逻辑回归分析以探讨临床和人口统计学变量与在医院数据中寻求治疗的患者以及接受HSCT的患者的性别的关联,并进行多变量分析以确定性别偏见的独立社会人口学预测因素。通过时间序列回归分析确定了15年研究期间MFR和MF-IRR的年度时间趋势。

结果

我们在研究中纳入了来自PBCR的11375名儿童。对来自医院记录的26891名儿童进行了筛查,纳入了22893名(85.1%)的数据(包括514名接受HSCT的儿童)。来自医院记录的22893名患者中有257名(1.1%)的居住细节缺失。诊断时儿童的粗MFR有利于男孩:德里PBCR中为2.00(95%CI 1.92-2.09),马德拉斯大都市肿瘤登记处中为1.44(1.32-1.57)。两个PBCR中癌症诊断的MF-IRR也偏向男孩(德里1.69[95%CI 1.61-1.76];马德拉斯大都市肿瘤登记处1.37[1.26-1.49])。基于医院记录的寻求治疗的儿童的MFR为2.06(95%CI 2.00-2.12),有利于男孩。在亚组分析中,印度北部寻求治疗的男孩比例高于南部(p<0.0001);私立中心高于提供补贴治疗中心(p<0.0001);血液系统恶性肿瘤患者高于实体恶性肿瘤患者(p<0.0001);居住在距离医院100公里或更远的患者高于距离医院100公里以内的患者(p<0.0001);农村地区居民高于城市地区居民(p=0.0006)。514名接受HSCT的儿童的MFR为2.81(95%CI 2.32-3.43),有利于男孩。时间趋势分析表明,在整个队列或基于医院数据的任何单个中心中,MFR均未显示出任何显著的年度变化;然而,分析确实显示德里PBCR中2005年至2014年期间MF-IRR呈下降趋势(p=0.031)。

解读

印度儿童癌症的性别比例在诊断水平上偏向男孩,在印度北部以及需要更高经济投入的情况下更为明显。印度应同时解决社会性别偏见问题并加强为女孩提供负担得起的医疗保健。

资金

无。

摘要的印地语翻译见补充材料部分。

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