美国癌症协会关于美国癌症差异状况的报告,2025年。

IF 232.4 1区 医学 Q1 ONCOLOGY
Farhad Islami MD, PhD, Gladys Arias MPA, Dongjun Lee MS, Daniel Wiese PhD, Jordan Baeker Bispo PhD, K. Robin Yabroff PhD, Rebecca L. Siegel MPH, Priti Bandi PhD, Nigar Nargis PhD, Alpa V. Patel PhD, Paul P. Thienprayoon MBA, MS, Arif H. Kamal MD, MBA, MHS, Elvan C. Daniels MD, MPH, Christina M. Annunziata MD, PhD, Kirsten Sloan BA, Lisa A. Lacasse MBA, Robert A. Winn MD, Otis W. Brawley MD, MACP, Carmen E. Guerra MD, MSCE, William L. Dahut MD, Ahmedin Jemal DVM, PhD
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自2021年以来,美国癌症协会每两年发布一次关于美国癌症差异状况的报告。在这份2025年的报告中,作者提供了按性别、种族、民族、社会经济地位(SES[教育程度作为代理])和地理位置(包括居住县和国会选区的城市化程度)划分的癌症发病率和结果差异的最新数据,以及造成这些差异的因素,包括主要癌症风险因素、筛查、健康的选择社会决定因素(SDOH)和与健康相关的社会需求。作者发现,在癌症连续体中存在巨大差异,包括许多癌症的风险因素、发病率、诊断阶段、接受治疗、生存率和死亡率,以及按种族和民族、教育程度和地理位置评估的SDOH。在2019年至2023年期间,黑人和美洲印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民的癌症死亡率最高,无论是总体死亡率还是癌症死亡的主要原因。在社会经济地位较低的成年人中,癌症死亡率也一直较高。然而,受教育程度对癌症死亡率的影响比种族差异大得多,这表明社会经济地位在推动癌症死亡率的种族差异中起着重要作用。黑人成年人的总体癌症死亡率高于同等教育水平的白人成年人,男性高7%-28%,女性高2%-43%。然而,在每个种族中,受教育年限≤12年的成年人的总体癌症死亡率比受教育年限≥16年的男性高143%-192%,女性高71%-140%。所有癌症的总死亡率在非大都市县比在大城市县高21%,其中肺癌(45%)和宫颈癌(36%)的差异最大,前列腺癌、女性乳腺癌和胰腺癌的差异最小(7%-8%)。按国会选区划分,总体癌症死亡率以及肺癌、结直肠癌和乳腺癌的死亡率最高的地区主要是中西部的南部和东部中北部地区;然而,对于前列腺癌,没有明显的地理模式。与癌症死亡率较低的群体相比,癌症死亡率较高的社会人口群体通常暴露于风险因素较高,健康保险覆盖率较低,获得癌症预防、早期检测和治疗的机会有限,这在很大程度上反映了SDOH的根本差异。缓解美国的癌症差异需要部门间利益攸关方的参与,有针对性的资金,联邦、州和地方各级的有效政策,以及广泛实施循证干预措施,例如扩大医疗保险覆盖面,包括通过加强市场和保护和扩大获得医疗补助的机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

American Cancer Society’s Report on the Status of Cancer Disparities in the United States, 2025

American Cancer Society’s Report on the Status of Cancer Disparities in the United States, 2025

Since 2021, the American Cancer Society has published its biennial report on the status of cancer disparities in the United States. In this 2025 report, the authors provide updated data on disparities in cancer occurrence and outcomes by sex, race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status (SES [educational attainment as a proxy]), and geographic location (including urbanicity of county of residence and congressional district), along with contributors to these disparities, including major cancer risk factors, screening, and select social determinants of health (SDOH) and health-related social needs. The authors found substantial disparities across the cancer continuum, including risk factors, incidence, stage at diagnosis, receipt of care, survival, and mortality for many cancers and in evaluated SDOH by race and ethnicity, educational attainment, and geographic location. During 2019 through 2023, Black and American Indian/Alaska Native populations had the highest cancer mortality rates, both overall and for the leading causes of cancer death. Cancer mortality rates were also consistently higher among adults with lower SES. However, differences in cancer mortality were substantially larger by education than by race, indicating that SES plays a major role in driving racial disparities in cancer mortality. Overall cancer mortality rates were higher in Black adults than in White adults with the same education level by 7%–28% among males and by 2%–43% among females. Within each race, however, overall cancer mortality rates were higher in adults with ≤12 years of education than in those with ≥16 years of education by 143%–192% among males and by 71%–140% among females. Mortality from all cancers combined was 21% higher in nonmetropolitan than in large metropolitan counties, with the greatest differences for lung (45%) and cervical (36%) cancers and the smallest for prostate, female breast, and pancreatic cancers (7%–8%). By congressional district, the highest cancer mortality rates both overall and for lung, colorectal, and breast cancers were largely found in the South and East North-Central division of the Midwest; however, for prostate cancer, there was no distinct geographic pattern. Sociodemographic groups that had higher cancer mortality generally had higher exposure to risk factors, lower health insurance coverage, and limited access to cancer prevention, early detection, and treatment compared with groups that had lower cancer mortality, largely reflecting fundamental disparities in SDOH. Mitigating cancer disparities in the United States requires intersectoral stakeholder engagement, targeted funding, effective policies at the federal, state, and local levels, and broad implementation of evidence-based interventions, such as expanding health insurance coverage, including through strengthening Marketplaces and protecting and expanding access to Medicaid.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
873.20
自引率
0.10%
发文量
51
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians" has been published by the American Cancer Society since 1950, making it one of the oldest peer-reviewed journals in oncology. It maintains the highest impact factor among all ISI-ranked journals. The journal effectively reaches a broad and diverse audience of health professionals, offering a unique platform to disseminate information on cancer prevention, early detection, various treatment modalities, palliative care, advocacy matters, quality-of-life topics, and more. As the premier journal of the American Cancer Society, it publishes mission-driven content that significantly influences patient care.
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