失去随访病例的管理和比例对小型人口癌症登记的癌症生存期估计值的影响。

IF 1.8 Q3 ONCOLOGY
Journal of Cancer Epidemiology Pub Date : 2022-01-30 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1155/2022/9068214
Fabian Gil, Adalberto Miranda-Filho, Claudia Uribe-Perez, N E Arias-Ortiz, M C Yépez-Chamorro, L M Bravo, Esther de Vries
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:估算存活率需要对患者从诊断到死亡的整个过程进行随访,以确保获得完整和高质量的数据。中低收入国家的许多人口癌症登记处难以将登记处数据与地区或国家生命统计数据联系起来,从而增加了随访病例丢失的几率。失去随访的病例对来自小型人口癌症登记处的生存率估计值的影响(方法:我们根据三个基于人口的癌症登记处的理想化真实数据模拟了各种情景,以评估随访丧失对胃癌、结肠癌和甲状腺癌(预后截然不同的癌症类型)1-5 年总生存率和净生存率的影响。我们采用了不同的随访损失比例(1-20%)和样本量(100-500 例)的多种方案。我们研究了剔除和剔除失去随访病例的影响;结果显示了平均偏倚的准时置信区间和引导置信区间:剔除失去随访的病例会导致总生存率被高估,这种影响在预后较差的癌症中最为明显,并随着随访时间的延长和失去随访病例比例的增加而增加;这些影响对净生存率的影响略大于对总生存率的影响。剔除失去随访的病例平均不会对生存率估计产生偏差,但在个别病例中,生存率存在低估和高估的情况。就胃癌、结肠癌和甲状腺癌而言,1%的随访丧失病例对5年癌症生存率的相对偏差分别介于6%与125%、2%与40%、0.1%与1.0%之间:从小型人口登记中估计癌症存活率必须谨慎:即使是很小比例的剔除或排除失去随访的病例也会夸大存活率,从而难以解释地区或国家间的比较。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Impact of the Management and Proportion of Lost to Follow-Up Cases on Cancer Survival Estimates for Small Population-Based Cancer Registries.

Impact of the Management and Proportion of Lost to Follow-Up Cases on Cancer Survival Estimates for Small Population-Based Cancer Registries.

Impact of the Management and Proportion of Lost to Follow-Up Cases on Cancer Survival Estimates for Small Population-Based Cancer Registries.

Impact of the Management and Proportion of Lost to Follow-Up Cases on Cancer Survival Estimates for Small Population-Based Cancer Registries.

Background: Estimation of survival requires follow-up of patients from diagnosis until death ensuring complete and good quality data. Many population-based cancer registries in low- and middle-income countries have difficulties linking registry data with regional or national vital statistics, increasing the chances of cases lost to follow-up. The impact of lost to follow-up cases on survival estimates from small population-based cancer registries (<500 cases) has been understudied, and bias could be larger than in larger registries.

Methods: We simulated scenarios based on idealized real data from three population-based cancer registries to assess the impact of loss to follow-up on 1-5-year overall and net survival for stomach, colon, and thyroid cancers-cancer types with very different prognosis. Multiple scenarios with varying of lost to follow-up proportions (1-20%) and sample sizes of (100-500 cases) were carried out. We investigated the impact of excluding versus censoring lost to follow-up cases; punctual and bootstrap confidence intervals for the average bias are presented.

Results: Censoring of lost to follow-up cases lead to overestimation of the overall survival, this effect was strongest for cancers with a poor prognosis and increased with follow-up time and higher proportion of lost to follow-up cases; these effects were slightly larger for net survival than overall survival. Excluding cases lost to follow-up did not generate a bias on survival estimates on average, but in individual cases, there were under- and overestimating survival. For gastric, colon, and thyroid cancer, relative bias on 5-year cancer survival with 1% of lost to follow-up varied between 6% and 125%, 2% and 40%, and 0.1% and 1.0%, respectively.

Conclusion: Estimation of cancer survival from small population-based registries must be interpreted with caution: even small proportions of censoring, or excluding lost to follow-up cases can inflate survival, making it hard to interpret comparison across regions or countries.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
审稿时长
20 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Cancer Epidemiology is a peer-reviewed, open access journal that publishes original research articles, review articles, case reports, and clinical studies in all areas of cancer epidemiology.
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