McMahon Kevin M, Eaton Vincent, Srikanth Kishan K, Tupper Connor, Merwin Matthew, Morris Matthew, Silberstein Peter T
Medical Education, Creighton University School of Medicine, Omaha, USA.
Medicine, Creighton University School of Medicine, Omaha, USA.
Cureus. 2023 Feb 9;15(2):e34819. doi: 10.7759/cureus.34819. eCollection 2023 Feb.
There are significant differences in prognosis for osteosarcoma, Ewing sarcoma, chondrosarcoma, and chordomas based on the stage at diagnosis. The five-year survival of these bone cancers varies from 75-87% at an early stage of diagnosis and falls to 27-55% at a late stage of diagnosis.
This study retrospectively evaluated the odds of stage I vs stage IV cancer at the time of diagnosis in patients with primary malignant bone tumors (osteosarcoma, chondrosarcoma, Ewing sarcoma and chordoma) diagnosed in the National Cancer Database (NCDB) between 2004 and 2018. Cross tabulations with Chi-square analysis were performed to evaluate frequencies of different socioeconomic and geographical characteristics between patients with stage I vs stage IV cancer. Multivariable binary logistic regression was performed to evaluate relationships between socioeconomic and geographical factors and the odds of stage IV cancer at the time of diagnosis. Statistical significance was set at α = 0.05.
8882 patients with stage I and 3063 with stage IV primary malignant bone tumors were identified. The odds of stage IV bone cancer at diagnosis are increased for patients on Medicaid (odds ratio [OR] = 1.298, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.043-1.616) or Medicare (OR = 1.795, 1.411-2.284). Odds of stage IV bone cancer at diagnosis were decreased with female sex (OR = 0.733, 0.671-0.800), private insurance (OR = 0.738, 0.601-0.905), and those treated at community cancer programs (OR = 0.542, 0.369-0.797), comprehensive cancer program (OR = 0.312, 0.215-0.452), or academic/research facilities (OR = 0.370, 0.249-0.550). No significant relationship was identified between the stage at diagnosis and race, ethnicity, Charlson-Deyo score, or education level. Stage IV cancer at diagnosis showed was proportionally lower in chondrosarcomas (17.1%) and chordomas (2.1%) than osteosarcomas (45.0%) and Ewing sarcomas (35.8%).
Odds of stage IV bone cancer at diagnosis are greater with male sex, Medicaid or Medicare insurance status, or treatment at community cancer programs. Providers should have a low suspicion for additional evaluation when treating patients with symptoms of bone cancer and should be aware of these disparities when treating people in these groups. This is to the authors' knowledge the first such study conducted through the NCDB.
骨肉瘤、尤因肉瘤、软骨肉瘤和弦瘤的预后在诊断阶段存在显著差异。这些骨癌的五年生存率在诊断早期为75% - 87%,而在诊断晚期则降至27% - 55%。
本研究回顾性评估了2004年至2018年在国家癌症数据库(NCDB)中诊断的原发性恶性骨肿瘤(骨肉瘤、软骨肉瘤、尤因肉瘤和弦瘤)患者在诊断时处于I期与IV期癌症的几率。进行交叉表分析和卡方检验以评估I期与IV期癌症患者不同社会经济和地理特征的频率。进行多变量二元逻辑回归以评估社会经济和地理因素与诊断时IV期癌症几率之间的关系。设定统计学显著性水平为α = 0.05。
共识别出8882例I期原发性恶性骨肿瘤患者和3063例IV期患者。参加医疗补助计划(医保优势比[OR] = 1.298,95%置信区间[CI]:1.043 - 1.616)或医疗保险(OR = 1.795,1.411 - 2.284)的患者在诊断时患IV期骨癌的几率增加。女性(OR = 0.733,0.671 - 0.800)、拥有私人保险(OR = 0.738,0.601 - 0.905)以及在社区癌症项目(OR = 0.542,0.369 - 0.797)、综合癌症项目(OR = 0.312,0.215 - 0.452)或学术/研究机构(OR = 0.370,0.249 - 0.550)接受治疗的患者在诊断时患IV期骨癌的几率降低。未发现诊断阶段与种族、民族、查尔森 - 戴约评分或教育水平之间存在显著关系。诊断时IV期癌症在软骨肉瘤(17.1%)和弦瘤(2.1%)中的比例低于骨肉瘤(45.0%)和尤因肉瘤(35.8%)。
男性、参加医疗补助计划或医疗保险以及在社区癌症项目接受治疗的患者在诊断时患IV期骨癌的几率更高。医疗服务提供者在治疗有骨癌症状的患者时应高度怀疑并进行进一步评估,在治疗这些人群时应意识到这些差异。据作者所知,这是通过NCDB进行的第一项此类研究。