Institute for Cancer Outcomes and Survivorship, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL.
Division of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL.
Blood. 2023 Jul 20;142(3):221-229. doi: 10.1182/blood.2023019631.
The association between individual-level poverty and relapse in children receiving maintenance treatment for acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) remains unclear. In a secondary analysis of COG-AALL03N1, we used data from US Census Bureau to categorize patients living below year-specific federal poverty thresholds, calculated using self-reported annual household income and size of household. Participants with federal poverty thresholds above 120% of their yearly household income were categorized as living in extreme poverty. Hazard of relapse was estimated using multivariable proportional subdistributional hazards regression for patients living in extreme poverty while receiving ALL maintenance therapy after adjusting for relevant predictors. Among 592 patients in this analysis, 12.3% of the patients were living in extreme poverty. After a median follow-up of 7.9 years, the cumulative incidence of relapse at 3 years from study enrollment among those living in extreme poverty was significantly higher (14.3%) than those not living in extreme poverty (7.6%). Multivariable analysis demonstrated that children living in extreme poverty had a 1.95-fold greater hazard of relapse than those not living in extreme poverty; this association was mitigated after the inclusion of race/ethnicity in the model, likely because of collinearity between race/ethnicity and poverty. A greater proportion of children living in extreme poverty were nonadherent to mercaptopurine (57.1% vs 40.9%); however, poor adherence did not completely explain the association between poverty and relapse risk. Future studies need to understand the mechanisms underlying the association between extreme poverty and relapse risk. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00268528.
个体贫困水平与接受急性淋巴细胞白血病(ALL)维持治疗的儿童复发之间的关系尚不清楚。在 COG-AALL03N1 的二次分析中,我们使用了美国人口普查局的数据,根据自我报告的年度家庭收入和家庭规模,将患者分为低于特定年度联邦贫困线的人群。联邦贫困线低于其家庭年收入 120%的患者被归类为生活在极端贫困中。对于接受 ALL 维持治疗且生活在极端贫困中的患者,我们使用多变量比例亚分布风险回归来估计复发风险,同时调整了相关预测因素。在这项分析中,有 592 名患者,其中 12.3%的患者生活在极端贫困中。在中位随访 7.9 年后,从研究入组开始 3 年内,生活在极端贫困中的患者的复发累积发生率明显较高(14.3%),而那些不生活在极端贫困中的患者的复发累积发生率为 7.6%。多变量分析表明,生活在极端贫困中的儿童复发的风险比不生活在极端贫困中的儿童高 1.95 倍;在纳入种族/民族因素后,这种关联有所缓解,这可能是由于种族/民族和贫困之间存在共线性。生活在极端贫困中的儿童中,不遵守巯基嘌呤治疗方案的比例更高(57.1%比 40.9%);然而,贫困程度并不能完全解释贫困与复发风险之间的关联。未来的研究需要了解极端贫困与复发风险之间关联的机制。该试验在 www.clinicaltrials.gov 上注册,编号为 #NCT00268528。