| Literature DB >> 26848688 |
Ray M Merrill1, Simone Bateman2.
Abstract
Beyond relative survival, which indicates the likelihood that patients will not die from causes associated with their cancer, conditional relative survival probabilities provide further useful prognostic information to cancer patients, tailored to the time already survived from diagnosis. This study presents conditional relative survival for melanoma patients in the United States, diagnosed during 2000-2008 and followed through 2012. Analyses are based on 62,803 male and 50,261 female cases in population-based cancer registries in the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program of the National Cancer Institute. Five-year relative survival estimates are presented for melanoma patients who have already survived one, two, three, four, or five years after the initial diagnosis. Five- and ten-year relative survival decreases with age, stage at diagnosis, and is lower among males, Blacks, and Hispanics. Five-year conditional relative survival improves with each year already survived. The potential for improvement in five-year conditional relative survival is greatest for older age, males, Blacks, Hispanics, and in later staged cases. For local disease, five-year conditional relative survival was significantly lower in ages greater than 65 years and in Blacks. It was significantly higher in females, non-Hispanics, and married individuals. Age had a greater inverse relationship with five-year survival in later staged disease. A similar result occurred for females and married individuals. In contrast, non-Hispanics had better five-year survival if diagnosed with local or regional disease, but not distant disease.Entities:
Keywords: SEER; cancer; conditional survival; population-based; prognosis; relative survival
Year: 2016 PMID: 26848688 PMCID: PMC4773743 DOI: 10.3390/cancers8020020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Melanoma cases diagnosed during 2000–2008 and relative survival through 2012 according to selected variables.
| Variable | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | % | 5-Year Survival % | 10-Year Survival % | |
| Age | ||||
| <65 years | 74,882 | 66.2 | 93 | 91 |
| ≥65 years | 38,182 | 33.8 | 88 | 86 |
| Sex | ||||
| Male | 62,803 | 55.5 | 89 | 87 |
| Female | 50,261 | 44.5 | 94 | 92 |
| Race | ||||
| White | 107,198 | 94.8 | 91 | 89 |
| Black | 565 | 0.5 | 72 | 69 |
| Other | 5301 | 4.7 | 97 | 97 |
| Ethnicity | ||||
| Hispanic | 3571 | 3.2 | 84 | 80 |
| Non-Hispanic | 109,493 | 96.8 | 91 | 89 |
| Marital Status | ||||
| Married | 59,415 | 52.5 | 92 | 90 |
| Single | 53,649 | 47.5 | 91 | 89 |
| Stage at Diagnosis | ||||
| Local | 92,786 | 82.1 | 99 | 98 |
| Regional | 11,743 | 10.4 | 64 | 56 |
| Distant | 4206 | 3.7 | 17 | 14 |
| Unknown | 4329 | 3.8 | 79 | 73 |
| Year of Diagnosis | ||||
| 2000–2002 | 34,648 | 30.6 | 91 | 89 |
| 2003–2005 | 37,762 | 33.4 | 91 | 89 |
| 2006–2008 | 40,654 | 36.0 | 91 | |
Source: Surveillance, epidemiology, and end results program, 18 registries, 2000–2008.
Figure 1Relative (left) and conditional relative (right) survival curves for melanoma.
Five-year relative survival conditioned on (0–5) Years Already Survived (YAS).
| Tumor Stage Variable | Local (%) | Regional (%) | Distant (%) | Unstaged (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept | ||||
| YAS | 0.0 | |||
| Intercept | ||||
| YAS | −0.0 | |||
| Age | ||||
| <65 years | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| ≥65 years | ||||
| Sex | ||||
| Male | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| Female | ||||
| Race | ||||
| White | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| Black | −7.6 | −15.8 | −11.8 | |
| Other | 1.0 | −2.6 | 10.0 | |
| Hispanic | ||||
| Yes | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| No | 0.7 | |||
| Marital Status | ||||
| Single | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| Married | −0.3 |
Source: Surveillance, epidemiology, and end results program, 18 registries research data, 2000–2008 diagnosed cases and followed through 2012. Estimates for each model were simultaneously calculated, adjusted for the other variables in the model. Bolded estimates are statistically significant, p < 0.05.