Geospatial analysis of multiple cancers in individuals in the US, 2004-2014.

Annals of cancer epidemiology Pub Date : 2021-03-01 Epub Date: 2021-03-30 DOI:10.21037/ace-19-40
Lia C Scott, Tzy-Mey Kuo, Dora Il'yasova, Lee R Mobley
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Abstract

Background: There is a projected rapid increase in cancer survivors in the US population, from 15.5 million in 2016 to 26.1 million by 2040. Improvements in treatment and detection have led to increased survival, however, there is now a risk of developing new cancers as a result of environment toxins, behavioral risk factors, genetic predisposition, and late-term effects of radiation and chemotherapeutic treatments. This study takes a geospatial approach to examining the place of occurrence of multiple cancers originating in the population of four screenable cancers-female breast, colorectal, prostate, and cervical cancers-among the US population.

Methods: During 2004-2014, 6,523,532 primary cancer patients with one of these four screenable cancers were examined, and subsequent primary cancers (multiple cancers of any type) were noted. Individual level analyses estimated the odds of diagnosis with multiple cancers controlling for age, sex, and race-ethnicity. Change in effects on odds of multiple cancer diagnoses with age, sex, and race-ethnicity were evaluated controlling separately for late-stage diagnosis of the primary cancer or each primary cancer diagnosis type. County-level spatial cluster analysis was employed to identify and visualize higher than average multiple cancer rates.

Results: Over half of the study population were female and almost 30% of the study population were diagnosed at late-stage for their first cancer. Multiple occurrences of all cancers increased during the time period for patients with initial breast or colorectal cancers. Among BC primary cancer cases, subsequent multiple cancers were mostly new breast cancers. By contrast, for CRC primary cancer cases, subsequent multiple cancers were about equally likely to be new CRC cases or other cancer types. Sex, age and race-ethnicity were all significantly associated with multiple cancers. In the model controlling for CRC as the primary type, the age and race-ethnicity effects were somewhat different than for all the other models. Thus, there was something distinctly different about the multiple cancer incidence among patients with CRC as their primary cancer as compared to patients with BC, CVC, or PC primaries. In subsequent analyses by county, there were distinct geospatial patterns in multiple cancer rates with most high-rate clusters occurring in the north- and mid-west US.

Conclusions: There were distinct individual level and geospatial disparities in multiple cancer diagnoses for the study population of all primary breast, colorectal, cervical, or prostate cancer patients during the decade studied. It is importance to emphasize continued screening for cancer survivors and research on personal and environmental drivers of multiple primary cancers.

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2004-2014 年美国个人患多种癌症的地理空间分析。
背景:预计美国癌症幸存者人数将从 2016 年的 1550 万迅速增加到 2040 年的 2610 万。治疗和检测方面的改进提高了存活率,但是,由于环境毒素、行为风险因素、遗传易感性以及放射和化疗的晚期影响,目前存在患上新癌症的风险。本研究采用地理空间方法,对美国人口中四种可筛查癌症--女性乳腺癌、结直肠癌、前列腺癌和宫颈癌--的多发性癌症发生地进行了研究:在 2004-2014 年期间,对 6,523,532 名患有上述四种可筛查癌症之一的原发性癌症患者进行了调查,并记录了后续原发性癌症(任何类型的多种癌症)。个人层面的分析估算了诊断出多种癌症的几率,并对年龄、性别和种族民族进行了控制。在分别控制原发性癌症晚期诊断或每种原发性癌症诊断类型的情况下,评估了多种癌症诊断几率随年龄、性别和种族族裔的影响变化。采用县级空间聚类分析来识别和显示高于平均水平的多发性癌症发病率:超过半数的研究对象为女性,近 30% 的研究对象在晚期诊断出首次患癌。在此期间,初次罹患乳腺癌或结肠直肠癌的患者中,所有癌症的多发率都有所上升。在 BC 初诊癌症病例中,随后的多发性癌症主要是新发乳腺癌。相比之下,对于 CRC 原发癌症病例,随后的多发性癌症是新的 CRC 病例还是其他癌症类型的可能性大致相同。性别、年龄和种族-民族均与多发性癌症有显著相关性。在控制 CRC 为原发类型的模型中,年龄和种族族裔的影响与所有其他模型有些不同。因此,与 BC、CVC 或 PC 原发癌患者相比,CRC 原发癌患者的多发性癌症发病率明显不同。在随后按郡进行的分析中,多发性癌症发病率有明显的地理空间模式,高发病率集群大多发生在美国北部和中西部:结论:在所研究的十年间,所有原发性乳腺癌、结直肠癌、宫颈癌或前列腺癌患者的多重癌症诊断在个体水平和地理空间上存在明显差异。重要的是要强调继续对癌症幸存者进行筛查,并对导致多种原发性癌症的个人和环境因素进行研究。
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