How does Linkage to the National Death Index Affect Population-Based Net Survival Estimates for Women with Cervical Cancer in Saudi Arabia?

Q3 Medicine
The gulf journal of oncology Pub Date : 2023-01-01
Eman Alkhalawi, Claudia Allemani, Ali Saeed Al-Zahrani, Michel P Coleman
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Abstract

Background: Population-based cancer survival is a key metric for the assessment of cancer control strategies. Accurate estimation of cancer survival requires complete follow-up data for all patients.

Aim: To explore the impact of linking national cancer registry data to the national death index on net survival estimates for women diagnosed with cervical cancer in Saudi Arabia during 2005-2016.

Methods: We acquired data on 1,250 Saudi women diagnosed with invasive cervical cancer during the 12- year period 2005-2016 from the Saudi Cancer Registry. These included the woman's last known vital status and the date of last known vital status, but this was restricted to information from clinical records and death certificates that mention cancer as a cause of death ("registry follow-up"). We submitted available national ID numbers to the National Information Center (NIC) of the Ministry of Interior, to ascertain the date of death, from any cause of death, for women who had died up until 31 December 2018 ("NIC follow-up"). We estimated age-standardised 5-year net survival using the Pohar-Perme estimator under five different scenarios using the two sources of follow-up, and censoring at the date of last contact with the registry versus extending survival until the closing date if no information on death was obtained.

Results: 1,219 women were eligible for survival analysis. Five-year net survival was lowest when using NIC followup only (56.8%; 95%CI 53.5 - 60.1%), and highest when registry follow-up only was used and survival time was extended until closure date for those with no information on death (81.8%; 95%CI 79.6 - 84%).

Conclusion: Reliance solely on information from deaths certified as due to cancer and clinical records leads to a high proportion of missing deaths in the national cancer registry. This is probably due to low quality of certification of the cause of death in Saudi Arabia. Linkage of the national cancer registry to the national death index at the NIC identifies virtually all deaths, providing more reliable survival estimates, and it eliminates the ambiguity in determining the underlying cause of death. Therefore, this should become the standard approach to estimating cancer survival in Saudi Arabia.

与国家死亡指数的联系如何影响沙特阿拉伯宫颈癌妇女基于人口的净生存估计?
背景:基于人群的癌症生存是评估癌症控制策略的关键指标。准确估计癌症生存需要对所有患者进行完整的随访数据。目的:探讨将国家癌症登记数据与国家死亡指数联系起来对2005-2016年沙特阿拉伯诊断为宫颈癌的妇女净生存估计的影响。方法:我们从沙特癌症登记处获得2005-2016年12年间诊断为浸润性宫颈癌的1250名沙特妇女的数据。这些信息包括该妇女最后一次已知的生命状态和最后一次已知的生命状态的日期,但这仅限于来自临床记录和死亡证明的信息,其中提到癌症是死亡原因(“登记随访”)。我们向内政部国家信息中心(NIC)提交了可用的国家身份证号码,以确定截至2018年12月31日死亡的妇女的死亡日期,无论死因如何(“NIC随访”)。我们使用Pohar-Perme估计器在五种不同情况下使用两种随访来源估计年龄标准化的5年净生存率,并在最后一次与登记处联系之日进行审查,如果没有获得死亡信息,则将生存率延长至截止日期。结果:1219名女性符合生存分析的条件。仅使用NIC随访时,5年净生存率最低(56.8%;95%CI 53.5 - 60.1%),仅使用登记随访并将无死亡信息的患者的生存时间延长至关闭日时最高(81.8%;95%ci 79.6 - 84%)。结论:仅仅依赖于癌症死亡认证和临床记录的信息,导致国家癌症登记中有很高比例的死亡丢失。这可能是由于沙特阿拉伯的死因证明质量较低。国家癌症登记与国家癌症信息中心的国家死亡指数的联系几乎确定了所有死亡,提供了更可靠的生存估计,并消除了确定潜在死亡原因的模糊性。因此,这应该成为估计沙特阿拉伯癌症生存率的标准方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
The gulf journal of oncology
The gulf journal of oncology Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
37
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