The 2020 US cancer screening deficit and the timing of adults' most recent screen: a population-based cross-sectional study.

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q1 PRIMARY HEALTH CARE
Jason Semprini, Radhika Ranganathan
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: In 2020, cancer screenings declined, resulting in a cancer screening deficit. The significance of this deficit, however, has yet to be quantified from a population health perspective. Our study addresses this evidence gap by examining how the pandemic changed the timing of American adults' most recent cancer screen.

Methodology: We obtained population-based, cancer screening data from the Behavioural Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) (2010, 2012, 2014, 2016, 2018, 2020). Mammograms, pap smears and colonoscopies were each specified as a variable of mutually exclusive categories to indicate the timing since the most recent screening (never, 0-1 years, 1-2 years, 3+ years). Our cross-sectional, quasi-experimental design restricts the sample to adults surveyed in January, February or March. We then leverage a quirk in the BRFSS implementation and consider adults surveyed in the second year of the 2020 survey wave as exposed to the COVID-19 pandemic. Respondents surveyed in January 2020-March 2020 were considered unexposed. To estimate the impact of exposure to the COVID-19 pandemic on the timing of recent cancer screenings, we constructed linear and logistic regression models which control for sociodemographic characteristics associated with screening patterns, and state fixed effects and temporal trend fixed effects to control for confounding.

Results: In 2020, the cancer screening deficit was largely due to a 1 year delay among adults who receive annual screening, as the proportion of adults reporting a cancer screen in the past year declined by a nearly identical proportion of adults reporting their most recent cancer screen 1-2 years ago (3%-4% points). However, the relative change was higher for mammograms and pap smears (17%) than colonoscopies (4%). We also found some evidence that the proportion of women reporting never having completed a mammogram declined in 2020, but the mechanisms for this finding should be further explored with the release of future data.

Conclusion: Our estimates for the pandemic's effect on cancer screening rates are smaller than prior studies. Because we account for temporal trends, we believe prior studies overestimated the effect of the pandemic and underestimated the overall downward trend in cancer screenings across the country leading up to 2020.

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2020年美国癌症筛查不足和成年人最近一次筛查的时间:一项基于人群的横断面研究。
目标:2020年,癌症筛查下降,导致癌症筛查不足。然而,从人口健康的角度来看,这一赤字的重要性尚待量化。我们的研究通过研究大流行如何改变美国成年人最近一次癌症筛查的时间来解决这一证据差距。方法:我们从行为危险因素监测系统(BRFSS)获得了基于人群的癌症筛查数据(201020122014201620182020)。乳房X光片、巴氏涂片和结肠镜检查均被指定为互斥类别的变量,以指示自最近一次筛查以来的时间(从不、0-1年、1-2年、3+年)。我们的横断面准实验设计将样本限制在1月、2月或3月接受调查的成年人。然后,我们利用BRFSS实施中的一个怪癖,将2020年调查浪潮第二年接受调查的成年人视为暴露于新冠肺炎大流行。2020年1月至2020年3月接受调查的受访者被认为未暴露。为了估计暴露于新冠肺炎大流行对最近癌症筛查时间的影响,我们构建了线性和逻辑回归模型,用于控制与筛查模式相关的社会人口统计学特征,以及状态固定效应和时间趋势固定效应,以控制混淆。结果:2020年,癌症筛查不足主要是由于1 接受年度筛查的成年人的年延迟,因为过去一年中报告癌症筛查的成年人比例下降了1-2年前报告最近一次癌症筛查的成年人几乎相同的比例(3%-4%)。然而,乳房X光片和巴氏涂片的相对变化(17%)高于结肠镜检查(4%)。我们还发现一些证据表明,2020年报告从未完成乳房X光检查的女性比例有所下降,但这一发现的机制应随着未来数据的发布而进一步探索。结论:我们对大流行对癌症筛查率影响的估计小于先前的研究。由于我们考虑了时间趋势,我们认为先前的研究高估了大流行的影响,低估了2020年前全国癌症筛查的总体下降趋势。
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
CiteScore
9.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
27
审稿时长
19 weeks
期刊介绍: Family Medicine and Community Health (FMCH) is a peer-reviewed, open-access journal focusing on the topics of family medicine, general practice and community health. FMCH strives to be a leading international journal that promotes ‘Health Care for All’ through disseminating novel knowledge and best practices in primary care, family medicine, and community health. FMCH publishes original research, review, methodology, commentary, reflection, and case-study from the lens of population health. FMCH’s Asian Focus section features reports of family medicine development in the Asia-pacific region. FMCH aims to be an exemplary forum for the timely communication of medical knowledge and skills with the goal of promoting improved health care through the practice of family and community-based medicine globally. FMCH aims to serve a diverse audience including researchers, educators, policymakers and leaders of family medicine and community health. We also aim to provide content relevant for researchers working on population health, epidemiology, public policy, disease control and management, preventative medicine and disease burden. FMCH does not impose any article processing charges (APC) or submission charges.
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