Kim Shana J, Tworoger Shelley S, Rosen Barry P, McLaughlin John R, Risch Harvey A, Narod Steven A, Kotsopoulos Joanne
Women's College Research Institute, Women's College Hospital, Toronto, ON M5S 1B2, Canada.
Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5T 3M7, Canada.
Cancers (Basel). 2024 Feb 28;16(5):972. doi: 10.3390/cancers16050972.
Tumor- and treatment-related factors are established predictors of ovarian cancer survival. New studies suggest a differential impact of exposures on ovarian cancer survival trajectories (i.e., rapidly fatal to long-term disease). This study examined the impact of pre-diagnostic risk factors on short- and long-term ovarian cancer survival trajectories in the Canadian context. This population-based longitudinal observational study included women diagnosed with invasive epithelial ovarian cancer from 1995 to 2004 in Ontario. Data were obtained from medical records, interviews, and the provincial cancer registry. Extended Cox proportional hazard models estimated the association between risk factors and all-cause and ovarian cancer-specific mortality by survival time intervals (<3 years (i.e., short-term survival), 3 to <6 years, 6 to <10 years, and ≥10 years (i.e., long-term survival)). Among 1421 women, histology, stage, and residual disease were the most important predictors of all-cause mortality in all survival trajectories, particularly for short-term survival. Reproductive and lifestyle factors did not strongly impact short-term overall survival but were associated with long-term overall survival. As such, among long-term survivors, history of breastfeeding significantly decreased the risk of all-cause mortality (HR 0.65; 95% CI 0.46, 0.93; < 0.05), whereas smoking history (HR 1.75; 95% CI 1.27, 2.40; < 0.05) and obesity (HR 1.81; 95% CI 1.24, 2.65; < 0.05) significantly increased the risk of all-cause mortality. The findings were consistent with ovarian cancer-specific mortality. These findings suggest that pre-diagnostic exposures differentially influence survival time following a diagnosis of ovarian cancer.
肿瘤及治疗相关因素是卵巢癌生存情况的既定预测指标。新研究表明,暴露因素对卵巢癌生存轨迹(即从快速致命到长期患病)具有不同影响。本研究在加拿大背景下,考察了诊断前危险因素对卵巢癌短期和长期生存轨迹的影响。这项基于人群的纵向观察性研究纳入了1995年至2004年在安大略省被诊断为浸润性上皮性卵巢癌的女性。数据来自医疗记录、访谈以及省级癌症登记处。扩展的Cox比例风险模型按生存时间间隔(<3年(即短期生存)、3至<6年、6至<10年以及≥10年(即长期生存))估计了危险因素与全因死亡率及卵巢癌特异性死亡率之间的关联。在1421名女性中,组织学类型、分期及残留病灶是所有生存轨迹中全因死亡率的最重要预测指标,尤其是对短期生存而言。生殖和生活方式因素对短期总体生存影响不大,但与长期总体生存相关。因此在长期幸存者中,母乳喂养史显著降低了全因死亡率风险(风险比0.65;95%置信区间0.46,0.93;P<0.05),而吸烟史(风险比1.75;95%置信区间1.27,2.40;P<0.05)和肥胖(风险比1.81;95%置信区间1.24,2.65;P<0.05)显著增加了全因死亡率风险。这些发现与卵巢癌特异性死亡率一致。这些发现表明,诊断前暴露因素对卵巢癌诊断后的生存时间有不同影响。