The intersection of race, ethnicity, and urbanicity on treatment paradigms and clinical outcomes for non-malignant primary tumors of the spine

IF 2.4 3区 医学 Q3 ONCOLOGY
Brandon Bishop , Harrison Hockenberry , Jacob Sperber , Edwin Owolo , Cesar Baeta , Mackenzie Price , Corey Neff , Carol Kruchko , Jill S. Barnholtz-Sloan , Antionette J. Charles , Camryn Sciubba , Quinn T. Ostrom , Eli Johnson , C. Rory Goodwin
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Non-malignant primary tumors of the spine (NMPTS) patients in rural areas face unique barriers that may limit their capacity to receive optimal care. With a lower geographical distribution of neurosurgical specialists and limited healthcare infrastructure, rural NMPTS patients may receive certain treatments at a lower frequency than metropolitan patients. NMPTS We sought to examine the association between residential urbanicity, race-ethnicity, treatment patterns, and survival outcomes for cases diagnosed with NMPTS.

Methods

Cases of NMPTS diagnosed between 2004 and 2019 were identified from the Central Brain Tumor Registry of the United States (CBTRUS), a combined dataset of CDC’s National Program of Cancer Registries (NPCR) and NCI’s Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) data. Using multivariable logistic regression, we evaluated the association between urbanicity and treatment (including surgery and radiation), adjusted for age at diagnosis, sex, and race-ethnicity. Patient-level all-cause survival data were obtained from the NPCR Survival Analytical Database (2004–2018).

Results

A total of 38,414 cases were identified, 33,097 of whom lived in metropolitan and 5317 of whom lived in non-metropolitan regions. Nerve sheath tumors and meningiomas were the most common tumor histopathologies across both regions, with no clinically significant difference in other histopathologies (p<0.001). There were statistically significant differences between the frequency and type of surgery received by urbanicity (p<0.001). Overall all-cause survival was significantly lower for NH Blacks residing in non-metropolitan areas when compared to NH Blacks residing in metropolitan areas (p<0.0001).

Conclusion

Our data demonstrates significant differences in the incidence of NMPTS across both race-ethnicity and urbanicity. However, a wider analysis of all-cause mortality reveals disparities in health outcomes across both race-ethnicity and urbanicity for Black and Hispanic populations. To address the disparity in health outcomes, policymakers and health providers need to work with local communities in rural areas to improve access to equitable and quality healthcare.

种族、民族和城市化对脊柱非恶性原发性肿瘤的治疗模式和临床结果的影响。
背景:农村地区的脊柱非恶性原发肿瘤(NMPTS)患者面临着独特的障碍,这些障碍可能会限制他们接受最佳治疗的能力。由于神经外科专家的地理分布较少,医疗保健基础设施有限,农村 NMPTS 患者接受某些治疗的频率可能低于城市患者。我们试图研究被诊断为 NMPTS 的病例的居住城市、种族-民族、治疗模式和生存结果之间的关联:2004年至2019年期间确诊的NMPTS病例来自美国中央脑肿瘤登记处(CBTRUS),该登记处是美国疾病预防控制中心国家癌症登记计划(NPCR)和美国国立癌症研究院(NCI)监测、流行病学和最终结果(SEER)数据的合并数据集。我们使用多变量逻辑回归评估了城市化与治疗(包括手术和放射治疗)之间的关系,并对诊断时的年龄、性别和种族进行了调整。患者层面的全因生存数据来自人大代表生存分析数据库(2004-2018年):结果:共发现38414例病例,其中33097例生活在大都市地区,5317例生活在非大都市地区。神经鞘瘤和脑膜瘤是这两个地区最常见的肿瘤组织病理学,其他组织病理学在临床上没有显著差异(p结论:我们的数据显示,不同种族和城市的 NMPTS 发病率存在明显差异。然而,对全因死亡率的更广泛分析表明,黑人和西班牙裔人口在不同种族和城市的健康结果方面存在差异。为了解决健康结果方面的差异,政策制定者和医疗服务提供者需要与农村地区的当地社区合作,以改善公平、优质的医疗服务。
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
Cancer Epidemiology
Cancer Epidemiology 医学-肿瘤学
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
3.80%
发文量
200
审稿时长
39 days
期刊介绍: Cancer Epidemiology is dedicated to increasing understanding about cancer causes, prevention and control. The scope of the journal embraces all aspects of cancer epidemiology including: • Descriptive epidemiology • Studies of risk factors for disease initiation, development and prognosis • Screening and early detection • Prevention and control • Methodological issues The journal publishes original research articles (full length and short reports), systematic reviews and meta-analyses, editorials, commentaries and letters to the editor commenting on previously published research.
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