Sugarman J R, Holliday M, Ross A, Castorina J, Hui Y
Portland Area Indian Health Service, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Cancer. 1996 Oct 1;78(7 Suppl):1564-8.
Previous reports have suggested that American Indians are sometimes classified as other races on cancer registries. Also, cancer registries typically do not include data on tribal affiliation. This study determined the extent of racial misclassification of American Indians in the Washington State Cancer Registry (WSCR) and obtained tribal-specific cancer data for Washington State.
A computer file including persons registered for services with the Portland Area Indian Health Service (IHS) or who were enrolled members of 19 tribes in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho (n = 127,375) was linked with WSCR records of incident cases for 1992 and 1993 (n = 49,420). Linkage was conducted with probabilistic methods using the AutoMatch software package.
Of 180 persons recorded as American Indian in the WSCR, 130 (72.2%) were identified in the IHS/tribal roll file. Of 259 American Indians included in the IHS/tribal file who were identified in the WSCR, 130 (50.2%) were classified as American Indian. The estimated age-adjusted cancer incidence among American Indians in Washington State increased from 153.5 per 100,000 population before record linkage to 267.5 per 100,000 after linkage. Of the 259 persons who were linked to the WSCR, 17 were not registered with IHS and appeared solely in the tribal rolls. Only two tribes had more than five identified cancer cases during the 2-year study period.
The number of IHS-enrolled American Indians or tribal members included in the WSCR would be underestimated by one third in the absence of record linkages, and the estimated cancer incidence of 43.6% would be lower before linkage. It is feasible to obtain tribal-specific cancer rates by linking tribal rolls to cancer registries, although the small number of cases in most tribes is a significant limitation. Further efforts to improve racial classification of American Indians in cancer registries should be undertaken.
先前的报告表明,在癌症登记处,美洲印第安人有时会被归类为其他种族。此外,癌症登记处通常不包括部落归属数据。本研究确定了华盛顿州癌症登记处(WSCR)中美洲印第安人种族错误分类的程度,并获取了华盛顿州特定部落的癌症数据。
一个计算机文件,其中包括在波特兰地区印第安卫生服务局(IHS)登记服务的人员,或华盛顿、俄勒冈和爱达荷州19个部落的在册成员(n = 127,375),与1992年和1993年WSCR的发病病例记录(n = 49,420)进行了关联。使用AutoMatch软件包通过概率方法进行关联。
在WSCR中记录为美洲印第安人的180人中,有130人(72.2%)在IHS/部落名册文件中被识别出来。在IHS/部落文件中包含的259名美洲印第安人中,有130人(50.2%)在WSCR中被归类为美洲印第安人。华盛顿州美洲印第安人的估计年龄调整癌症发病率从记录关联前的每10万人口153.5例增加到关联后的每10万人口267.5例。在与WSCR关联的259人中,有17人未在IHS登记,仅出现在部落名册中。在为期两年的研究期间,只有两个部落有超过5例确诊的癌症病例。
如果没有记录关联,WSCR中登记的IHS在册美洲印第安人或部落成员数量将被低估三分之一,并且关联前估计的癌症发病率会低43.6%。通过将部落名册与癌症登记处关联来获取特定部落的癌症发病率是可行的,尽管大多数部落的病例数量较少是一个重大限制。应进一步努力改善癌症登记处中美洲印第安人的种族分类。