| Literature DB >> 24359157 |
Tanimola Martins1, William Hamilton, Obioha C Ukoumunne.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Minimising diagnostic delays in cancer may help improve survival. Ethnic minorities have worse outcomes in some cancer types when compared to the majority; this may relate in part to differences during the diagnostic phase. Only a few British studies have specifically explored this relationship, and no synthesis of these exists. The present study aimed to systematically review evidence on ethnic inequalities in cancer diagnosis, focussing on patient and primary care intervals of diagnosis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24359157 PMCID: PMC3878039 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2296-14-197
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Figure 1Milestone and time intervals from symptoms onset to treatment.
Review search terms
| Terms relating to cancer : Cancer, Neoplasm, Malignant Neoplasm, tumour, Malignant tumour, Astrocytoma, Adenocarcinoma, Glioma, Mesothelioma, Medulloblastoma, Myeloma, Melanoma, Neuroblastoma, Sarcoma, Nonmelanoma, Osteosarcoma, Teratoma, Seminoma, Hodgkin, leuk?emia, Lymphoma, Retinoblastoma | Terms defining ethnic minorities in the UK: Ethnic* Race* Cultural groups, white Irish, other whites, African British, Black* Black Caribbean, British Caribbean, Asian*, Indian, British, Indian, Pakistani, British Pakistani, Bangladeshi, British, Bangladeshi, Chinese, Mixed race | Ethnic majority in the UK: Ethnic* Race* Cultural groups, White British | Terms relating to intervals of cancer diagnosis: Duration of symptom; Interval of symptoms; Time; Delay; Late; Postpone; and Wait to Symptom, Presentation, Attendance, Consultation, Appointment, Diagnosis, Detection, Treatment, Intervention, Referral. Other terms; Gate keeping, primary care |
Quality of studies
| Adapted question | Unchanged | Unchanged. Key confounders include: age, gender, SES, co-morbidity, healthcare system, family history of cancer and tumour growth rates | Have they presented estimates of association along with the confidence intervals? Are the confidence intervals narrow? | Unchanged | |||
| Rajan et al. (2011) [ | Met | Unmet | Partially met | Met | Unmet | Unmet | Sat |
| Meechan et al. (2002) [ | Met | Partially met | Met | Met | Unmet | Unmet | Sat |
| Velikova et al., (2004) [ | Met | Partially met | Unmet | Partially met | Partially met | Partially met | Sat |
| Nosarti et al. (2000) [ | Met | Met | Met | Partially met | Partially met | Unmet | Sat |
| Neal and Allgar (2005) [ | Met | Met | Met | Partially met | Partially met | Partially met | Med |
| Sadler et al. (2009) [ | Met | Met | Met | Partially met | Unmet | Unmet | Sat |
| Metcalfe et al. (2008) [ | Met | Partially met | Partially met | Met | Partially met | Met | Sat |
Note: Sat satisfactory; Med medium quality paper.
Figure 2Flow chart of study selection process.
Characteristics and findings of reviewed studies
| Rajan et al. (2011) [ | UK (West Yorkshire) | To improve knowledge about late presentation and management of breast cancer among South Asian women. | Breast | n = 1,630 (36 South Asian women) all female median age = 53.5 years | Retrospective: Breast cancer waiting list database and case notes | South Asian women; Indians and Pakistanis | None; throughout the paper, including the title, the authors imply South Asian women had more delay | Duration of breast symptoms prior to presentation within primary care | 45% of Asian women delayed symptoms beyond 8 weeks before visiting their GP |
| Meechan et al. (2002) [ | New Zealand | Delay in seeking medical care for self-detected breast symptoms in New Zealand women. | Breast | n = 85 all female mean age =38 years | Retrospective: questionnaire & patient record | Minority New Zealanders - Maori, Pacific & Asian/Indian | European New Zealanders | Patient delay | No difference in patient delay by ethnicity. |
| Velikova et al. (2004) [ | UK (South Yorkshire) | To describe the effect of ethnicity on tumour stage, treatment, patient and providers delays in diagnosis of breast cancer | Breast | n = 16,879 all female mean age = 49.7 years in Asians and 62 years in non-Asians | Retrospective: Cancer registry data | South Asian | Non-Asian | Patients and providers delays to diagnosis | After adjusting for, age, SES and health care settings; patient delay was longer in Asian than in non –Asian women (median of 61 days vs. median of 31 days, P = 0.005) |
| Nosarti et al. (2000) [ | UK | To identify factors associated with delay in presentation and assessment of symptomatic breast cancer | Breast | n = 692 all female median age = 49 years | Retrospective: Interview, GP & hospital records | African Afro-Caribbean and Asian | British and other white | Patient and system delay | Ethnicity were non-contributory to patient delay in breast cancer |
| Neal and Allgar (2005) [ | UK | To explore the relationship between socio-demographic factors & delays in the diagnosis of six cancers | Breast, lung, colorectal, prostate NHL, and ovarian | n = 65,192 male & female all age groups | Retrospective: Analysis of the National Survey Data | Blacks - Africans, Caribbean & others blacks. South Asians -Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi, others. | Whites | Total, pre-hospital, referral and secondary care delay | After adjusting for marital status, gender, age and SES, Asian and black had longer pre-hospital delays for breast cancer in women (P = 0.001) and longer referral delay for colorectal cancer (P = 0.02). No evidence of difference for lung, prostate, NHL and ovarian. |
| Sadler et al. (2009) [ | UK (Birmingham) | The effect of ethnicity on the presentation and management of oesophageal and gastric cancers: A UK perspective | oesophageal & gastric | n = 244 male & female median age = 71 years | Retrospective: Case-note audit | Asians and Blacks | Caucasians | Referral routes and total diagnostic interval | Asians and Blacks compared to Caucasians were less likely to be diagnosed within 3 months of symptom discovery (P = 0.03) and less likely to take the optimal route to diagnosis (p = 0.01). |
| Metcalfe et al. (2008) [ | UK | To examine the pathways followed by black and white men to prostate cancer diagnosis | Prostate | n = 1,866 men median age = 67.9 years in blacks 73.3 years in whites | Retrospective: Questionnaire, hospital records and cancer registry data | Black men | White men | Delay between onset of symptoms and first GP presentation. | After adjusting for age and hospital centre, no significant difference between white and black men in patient delay (odds ratio: 0.82; 95% CI: 0.57 to 1.19) |