Cancer Incidence and Survival after Emergency Department Care in the U.S. Midwest: An Opportunity for Cancer Interception.

IF 2.6
Mark E Sherman, Michael G Heckman, Christopher C DeStephano, Launia J White, Jennifer L St Sauver, Ruth M Pfeiffer
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Abstract

Historically, cancers diagnosed via the emergency department (ED) portend a poor prognosis. Recent data from the United States are sparse, and analyses of cancers detected in the years following ED visits are lacking. Thus, we analyzed data from nine rural U.S. Midwest counties included within the population-based Rochester Epidemiology Project (2015-2021). Participants without a history of cancer (N = 42,074) who did not receive ED care were matched 1:1 to ED participants on the date of ED visit, age, sex, race, ethnicity, and county of residence. Analyses were restricted to participants with records ≤2 years prior to ED or index visit and ≥30 days after. HRs and 95% confidence intervals (CI) comparing cancer incidence and deaths among ED and non-ED participants were estimated from Cox proportional hazards regression models, either unadjusted or adjusted for covariates. Cumulative cancer incidence curves accounting for competing risks of death and survival (all cause and cancer-specific) were estimated. The median follow-up was 6.3 years, with 2,719 (6.46%) cancers diagnosed among ED participants and 3,139 (7.46%) among non-ED participants. ED participants experienced lower cancer risk overall (HRAdjusted = 0.70; 95% CI, 0.66-0.74; P = 8.89 × 10-31), specifically for breast cancer, prostate cancer, melanoma, and secondary cancers. Cancer-specific mortality was higher among ED participants (HRAdjusted = 1.76; 95% CI, 1.49-2.08; P = 3.62 × 10-11). Compared with non-ED participants, ED participants experienced a lower incidence of cancer but higher overall cancer-specific mortality, suggesting that subsets of ED patients may benefit from postvisit preventive interventions.

Prevention relevance: This cohort analysis shows that cancer incidence over 6 years was lower among participants after an ED visit than among matched non-ED participants, whereas cancer-specific mortality was higher in the ED group (HRAdjusted = 1.76; 95% CI, 1.49-2.08; P = 3.62 × 10-11), suggesting the potential benefit of preventive interventions.

美国中西部急诊科护理后的癌症发病率和生存率:癌症拦截的机会。
从历史上看,通过急诊科(ED)诊断的癌症预示着预后不良。最近来自美国的数据很少,并且缺乏对ED就诊后数年内检测到的癌症的分析。因此,我们分析了基于人口的罗切斯特流行病学项目(REP)(2015-2021)中美国中西部9个农村县的数据。没有接受ED治疗的无癌症病史的参与者(N=42,074)与ED参与者按ED就诊日期、年龄、性别、种族、民族和居住县进行1:1匹配。分析仅限于30天后有记录的参与者。比较急症和非急症患者癌症发病率和死亡率的风险比(hr)和95%置信区间(ci)由Cox比例风险回归模型估计,包括未调整或调整协变量。估计了考虑死亡和生存(全因和癌症特异性)竞争风险的累积癌症发病率曲线。中位随访时间为6.3年,ED参与者中诊断出2719例(6.46%)癌症,非ED参与者中诊断出3139例(7.46%)癌症。ED参与者总体上患癌风险较低(HRAdjusted=0.70, 95%CI: 0.66-0.74;p=8.89 X10-31),尤其是乳腺癌、前列腺癌、黑色素瘤和继发性癌症。ED患者的癌症特异性死亡率更高(HRAdjusted=1.76, 95%CI: 1.49-2.08;p = 3.62 x10-11)。与非ED患者相比,ED患者的癌症发病率较低,但总体癌症特异性死亡率较高,这表明ED患者亚群可能受益于术后预防干预。
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