Time-varying associations of patient and tumor characteristics with cancer survival: an analysis of SEER data across 14 cancer sites, 2004-2017.

IF 2.2 4区 医学 Q3 ONCOLOGY
Cancer Causes & Control Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Epub Date: 2024-05-29 DOI:10.1007/s10552-024-01888-y
Emily K Roberts, Lingfeng Luo, Alison M Mondul, Mousumi Banerjee, Christine M Veenstra, Angela B Mariotto, Matthew J Schipper, Kevin He, Jeremy M G Taylor, Andrew F Brouwer
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose: Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) cancer registries provides information about survival duration and cause of death for cancer patients. Baseline demographic and tumor characteristics such as age, sex, race, year of diagnosis, and tumor stage can inform the expected survival time of patients, but their associations with survival may not be constant over the post-diagnosis period.

Methods: Using SEER data, we examined if there were time-varying associations of patient and tumor characteristics on survival, and we assessed how these relationships differed across 14 cancer sites. Standard Cox proportional hazards models were extended to allow for time-varying associations and incorporated into a competing-risks framework, separately modeling cancer-specific and other-cause deaths. For each cancer site and for each of the five factors, we estimated the relative hazard ratio and absolute hazard over time in the presence of competing risks.

Results: Our comprehensive consideration of patient and tumor characteristics when estimating time-varying hazards showed that the associations of age, tumor stage at diagnosis, and race/ethnicity with risk of death (cancer-specific and other-cause) change over time for many cancers; characteristics of sex and year of diagnosis exhibit some time-varying patterns as well. Stage at diagnosis had the largest associations with survival.

Conclusion: These findings suggest that proportional hazards assumptions are often violated when examining patient characteristics on cancer survival post-diagnosis. We discuss several interesting results where the relative hazards are time-varying and suggest possible interpretations. Based on the time-varying associations of several important covariates on survival after cancer diagnosis using a pan-cancer approach, the likelihood of the proportional hazards assumption being met or corresponding interpretation should be considered in survival analyses, as flawed inference may have implications for cancer care and policy.

Abstract Image

患者和肿瘤特征与癌症生存期的时变关联:2004-2017 年 14 个癌症病例的 SEER 数据分析。
目的:癌症监测、流行病学和最终结果(SEER)登记处提供了有关癌症患者生存期和死因的信息。年龄、性别、种族、诊断年份和肿瘤分期等基线人口学和肿瘤特征可以为患者的预期生存时间提供信息,但它们与生存的关系在诊断后的时期内可能并不恒定:我们利用 SEER 数据研究了患者和肿瘤特征与生存期之间是否存在时变关系,并评估了这些关系在 14 个癌症部位之间的差异。我们对标准考克斯比例危险模型进行了扩展,以考虑时变关联,并将其纳入竞争风险框架,分别对癌症特异性死亡和其他原因死亡进行建模。对于每个癌症部位和五个因素中的每个因素,我们都估算了在存在竞争风险的情况下,随时间变化的相对危险比和绝对危险:在估算时变危险时,我们对患者和肿瘤特征进行了综合考虑,结果表明,在许多癌症中,年龄、诊断时的肿瘤分期以及种族/民族与死亡风险(癌症特异性死亡和其他原因死亡)的关系会随着时间的推移而发生变化;性别和诊断年份等特征也表现出一些时变模式。诊断时的分期与生存率的关系最大:这些发现表明,在研究癌症患者特征对诊断后生存期的影响时,往往会违反比例危险假设。我们讨论了相对危险度随时间变化的几个有趣结果,并提出了可能的解释。基于采用泛癌症方法得出的几个重要协变量与癌症诊断后生存期的时变关系,在进行生存期分析时应考虑满足比例危险度假设的可能性或相应的解释,因为错误的推论可能会对癌症治疗和政策产生影响。
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来源期刊
Cancer Causes & Control
Cancer Causes & Control 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
4.30%
发文量
130
审稿时长
6.6 months
期刊介绍: Cancer Causes & Control is an international refereed journal that both reports and stimulates new avenues of investigation into the causes, control, and subsequent prevention of cancer. By drawing together related information published currently in a diverse range of biological and medical journals, it has a multidisciplinary and multinational approach. The scope of the journal includes: variation in cancer distribution within and between populations; factors associated with cancer risk; preventive and therapeutic interventions on a population scale; economic, demographic, and health-policy implications of cancer; and related methodological issues. The emphasis is on speed of publication. The journal will normally publish within 30 to 60 days of acceptance of manuscripts. Cancer Causes & Control publishes Original Articles, Reviews, Commentaries, Opinions, Short Communications and Letters to the Editor which will have direct relevance to researchers and practitioners working in epidemiology, medical statistics, cancer biology, health education, medical economics and related fields. The journal also contains significant information for government agencies concerned with cancer research, control and policy.
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