School of Public Health, University of Adelaide, North Terrace, Adelaide, SA, 5000, Australia.
Wardliparingga Aboriginal Health Research, South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute, North Terrace, Adelaide, SA, 5000, Australia.
Popul Health Metr. 2023 Sep 13;21(1):14. doi: 10.1186/s12963-023-00314-w.
Cancer control initiatives are informed by quantifying the capacity to reduce cancer burden through effective interventions. Burden measures using health administrative data are a sustainable way to support monitoring and evaluating of outcomes among patients and populations. The Fraction of Life Years Lost After Diagnosis (FLYLAD) is one such burden measure. We use data on Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal South Australians from 1990 to 2010 to show how FLYLAD quantifies disparities in cancer burden: between populations; between sub-population cohorts where stage at diagnosis is available; and when follow-up is constrained to 24-months after diagnosis.
FLYLAD is the fraction of years of life expectancy lost due to cancer (YLL) to life expectancy years at risk at time of cancer diagnosis (LYAR) for each person. The Global Burden of Disease standard life table provides referent life expectancies. FLYLAD was estimated for the population of cancer cases diagnosed in South Australia from 1990 to 2010. Cancer stage at diagnosis was also available for cancers diagnosed in Aboriginal people and a cohort of non-Aboriginal people matched by sex, year of birth, primary cancer site and year of diagnosis.
Cancers diagnoses (N = 144,891) included 777 among Aboriginal people. Cancer burden described by FLYLAD was higher among Aboriginal than non-Aboriginal (0.55, 95% CIs 0.52-0.59 versus 0.39, 95% CIs 0.39-0.40). Diagnoses at younger ages among Aboriginal people, 7 year higher LYAR (31.0, 95% CIs 30.0-32.0 versus 24.1, 95% CIs 24.1-24.2) and higher premature cancer mortality (YLL = 16.3, 95% CIs 15.1-17.5 versus YLL = 8.2, 95% CIs 8.2-8.3) influenced this. Disparities in cancer burden between the matched Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal cohorts manifested 24-months after diagnosis with FLYLAD 0.44, 95% CIs 0.40-0.47 and 0.28, 95% CIs 0.25-0.31 respectively.
FLYLAD described disproportionately higher cancer burden among Aboriginal people in comparisons involving: all people diagnosed with cancer; the matched cohorts; and, within groups diagnosed with same staged disease. The extent of disparities were evident 24-months after diagnosis. This is evidence of Aboriginal peoples' substantial capacity to benefit from cancer control initiatives, particularly those leading to earlier detection and treatment of cancers. FLYLAD's use of readily available, person-level administrative records can help evaluate health care initiatives addressing this need.
癌症控制计划的制定依据是通过有效的干预措施来量化降低癌症负担的能力。使用健康行政数据来衡量负担是一种可持续的方法,可以支持对患者和人群的结果进行监测和评估。失寿年数比(FLYLAD)就是这样一种负担衡量指标。我们使用了 1990 年至 2010 年南澳大利亚州原住民和非原住民的数据,展示了 FLYLAD 如何衡量癌症负担的差异:人群之间;在可获得诊断时分期的亚人群队列之间;以及在诊断后随访限制为 24 个月时。
FLYLAD 是癌症导致的预期寿命损失(YLL)与癌症诊断时风险预期寿命年数(LYAR)的比值,适用于每个人。全球疾病负担标准生命表提供参考预期寿命。我们对 1990 年至 2010 年在南澳大利亚州诊断出的癌症病例的人群进行了 FLYLAD 估计。对于在原住民中诊断出的癌症和通过性别、出生年份、主要癌症部位和诊断年份相匹配的非原住民队列中的癌症,也可以获得癌症诊断时的分期。
癌症诊断(N=144891)包括 777 例原住民病例。原住民的癌症负担描述为 FLYLAD 高于非原住民(0.55,95%CI 0.52-0.59 与 0.39,95%CI 0.39-0.40)。原住民中更年轻的诊断年龄、7 岁更高的 LYAR(31.0,95%CI 30.0-32.0 与 24.1,95%CI 24.1-24.2)和更高的癌症早期死亡率(YLL=16.3,95%CI 15.1-17.5 与 YLL=8.2,95%CI 8.2-8.3)影响了这一点。在匹配的原住民和非原住民队列中,癌症负担的差异在诊断后 24 个月表现为 FLYLAD 0.44,95%CI 0.40-0.47 和 0.28,95%CI 0.25-0.31。
FLYLAD 描述了在涉及所有被诊断患有癌症的人群、匹配队列以及同一分期疾病的人群中,原住民的癌症负担不成比例地更高。这种差异的程度在诊断后 24 个月时就已经显现出来。这证明了原住民在癌症控制计划中具有巨大的受益潜力,特别是在那些能够更早发现和治疗癌症的计划中。FLYLAD 利用易于获取的个人行政记录,可以帮助评估解决这一需求的医疗保健计划。