Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Department of Transplantation, Mayo Clinic Florida, Jacksonville, Florida, USA.
Cancer Med. 2024 Aug;13(15):e7463. doi: 10.1002/cam4.7463.
The highly variable occurrence of primary liver cancers across the United States emphasize the relevance of location-based factors. Social determinants such as income, educational attainment, housing, and other factors may contribute to regional variations in outcomes. To evaluate their impact, this study identified and analyzed clusters of high mortality from primary liver cancers and the association of location-based determinants with mortality across the contiguous United States.
A geospatial analysis of age-adjusted incidence and standardized mortality rates from primary liver cancers from 2000 to 2020 was performed. Local indicators of spatial association identified hot-spots, clusters of counties with significantly higher mortality. Temporal analysis of locations with persistent poverty, defined as high (>20%) poverty for at least 30 years, was performed. Social determinants were analyzed individually or globally using composite measures such as the social vulnerability index or social deprivation index. Disparities in county level social determinants between hot-spots and non-hot-spots were analyzed by univariate and multivariate logistic regression.
There are distinct clusters of liver cancer incidence and mortality, with hotspots in east Texas and Louisiana. The percentage of people living below the poverty line or Hispanics had a significantly higher odds ratio for being in the top quintile for mortality rates in comparison to other quintiles and were highly connected with mortality rates. Current and persistent poverty were both associated with an evolution from non-hotspots to new hotspots of mortality. Hotspots were predominantly associated with locations with significant levels of socioeconomic vulnerability or deprivation.
Poverty at a county level is associated with mortality from primary liver cancer and clusters of higher mortality. These findings emphasize the importance of addressing poverty and related socio-economic determinants as modifiable factors in public health policies and interventions aimed at reducing mortality from primary liver cancers.
美国原发性肝癌的发病率差异很大,这强调了地理位置因素的相关性。社会决定因素,如收入、教育程度、住房和其他因素,可能导致地区间结果的差异。为了评估其影响,本研究确定并分析了原发性肝癌高死亡率的聚类,并分析了基于地理位置的决定因素与美国大陆各地死亡率的相关性。
对 2000 年至 2020 年原发性肝癌的年龄调整发病率和标准化死亡率进行了地理空间分析。局部空间关联指标确定了热点,即死亡率显著较高的县集群。对至少 30 年持续贫困(定义为贫困率>20%)的地点进行了时间分析。单独或整体分析了社会脆弱性指数或社会剥夺指数等综合指标的社会决定因素。通过单变量和多变量逻辑回归分析了热点和非热点地区县级社会决定因素的差异。
肝癌发病率和死亡率存在明显的聚类,东德克萨斯州和路易斯安那州存在热点。与其他五分位数相比,生活在贫困线以下或西班牙裔的人口比例更高,其处于死亡率最高五分位数的可能性具有显著更高的优势比,且与死亡率高度相关。当前和持续贫困都与非热点地区向新的死亡率热点地区的演变有关。热点地区主要与具有显著社会经济脆弱性或剥夺水平的地点相关。
县级贫困与原发性肝癌死亡率和更高死亡率的聚类有关。这些发现强调了在旨在降低原发性肝癌死亡率的公共卫生政策和干预措施中,将贫困和相关社会经济决定因素作为可改变因素加以解决的重要性。