| Literature DB >> 28910593 |
Christopher J Johnson1, Hannah K Weir2, Angela Mariotto3, Reda Wilson2, Diane Nishri4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Population-based cancer survival data provide insight into the effectiveness of health care delivery. Comparing survival for all cancer sites combined is challenging, because the primary cancer site and age distribution of patients may differ among areas or change over time. Cancer survival indices (CSIs) are summary measures of survival for cancers of all sites combined and are used in England and Europe to monitor temporal trends and examine geographic differences in survival. We describe the construction of the North American Cancer Survival Index and demonstrate how it can be used to compare survival by geographic area and by race.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28910593 PMCID: PMC5609495 DOI: 10.5888/pcd14.170201
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Chronic Dis ISSN: 1545-1151 Impact factor: 2.830
Weights Used In Case-Mix Standardization of Estimated Relative Survival Ratios for the North American Cancer Survival Indexa
| Primary Cancer Site | Sex-Specific | Male and Female Patients Combined | Both Sexes | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | Female | Male | Female | ||
| Brain and other nervous system | 1.360 | 1.203 | 0.710 | 0.575 | 1.285 |
| Breast | 0.242 | 29.264 | 0.126 | 13.990 | 14.116 |
| Cervix uteri | 0.000 | 1.806 | 0.000 | 0.864 | 0.864 |
| Colon and rectum | 9.981 | 10.287 | 5.210 | 4.918 | 10.128 |
| Corpus and uterus, not otherwise specified | 0.000 | 5.943 | 0.000 | 2.841 | 2.841 |
| Esophagus | 1.601 | 0.485 | 0.835 | 0.232 | 1.067 |
| Hodgkin lymphoma | 0.584 | 0.533 | 0.305 | 0.255 | 0.560 |
| Kidney and renal pelvis | 3.948 | 2.675 | 2.061 | 1.279 | 3.339 |
| Larynx | 1.272 | 0.352 | 0.664 | 0.168 | 0.832 |
| Leukemia | 2.803 | 2.284 | 1.463 | 1.092 | 2.555 |
| Liver and intrahepatic bile duct | 1.945 | 0.837 | 1.015 | 0.400 | 1.416 |
| Lung and bronchus | 14.788 | 13.787 | 7.718 | 6.591 | 14.309 |
| Melanoma of the skin | 4.418 | 3.591 | 2.306 | 1.717 | 4.023 |
| Mesothelioma | 0.326 | 0.103 | 0.170 | 0.049 | 0.219 |
| Myeloma | 1.327 | 1.206 | 0.693 | 0.576 | 1.269 |
| Non-Hodgkin lymphoma | 4.212 | 3.982 | 2.198 | 1.903 | 4.102 |
| Oral cavity and pharynx | 3.171 | 1.521 | 1.655 | 0.727 | 2.382 |
| Ovary | 0.000 | 3.067 | 0.000 | 1.466 | 1.466 |
| Pancreas | 2.438 | 2.675 | 1.272 | 1.279 | 2.551 |
| Prostate | 29.321 | 0.000 | 15.304 | 0.000 | 15.304 |
| Stomach | 1.718 | 1.179 | 0.897 | 0.564 | 1.461 |
| Testis | 1.028 | 0.000 | 0.537 | 0.000 | 0.537 |
| Thyroid | 1.138 | 3.945 | 0.594 | 1.886 | 2.480 |
| Urinary bladder | 6.585 | 2.367 | 3.437 | 1.131 | 4.568 |
| Other | 5.793 | 6.908 | 3.024 | 3.302 | 6.326 |
| Total | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | |
Weights were derived from the proportionate distribution of North American Association of Central Cancer Registries incident cases for people aged ≥15 y, by sex and primary cancer site for diagnosis years 2006 through 2008.
Both sexes’ weights should be used only when separate survival estimates for male and female patients are not available. The resulting weighted survival measure will be adjusted for site mix, but not for the proportion of male and female patients.
FigureGraph a shows a funnel plot of 5-year age-standardized relative survival ratios for all cancer sites combined for men and women diagnosed with cancer from 2006 through 2012 and followed up on December 31, 2012. Graph b shows a funnel plot of 5-year age-, sex-, and site-standardized relative survival ratios, calculated by using the North American Cancer Survival Index (CSI), for men and women diagnosed with cancer from 2006 through 2012 and followed up on December 31, 2012. Graphs a and b show funnel plots of 5-year relative survival plotted against precision, such that low-precision estimates are on the left side, and high-precision estimates are on the right side. Precision was calculated as the inverse of the variance of the survival estimates. The control limits were established by using the range of standard errors from the registry-specific survival estimates and are shown as the lower and upper percentile limits of the standard Normal distribution (z = 1.96 for 95% control limits and z = 3.09 for 99.8% control limits) around US combined estimates. Graph a shows the dramatic variation in estimates of relative survival by registry jurisdiction for all sites combined. Graph b shows substantially less variation using the CSI, which is standardized by age, sex, and cancer-site mix, than in using the all sites combined statistics set. The survival estimates in graph b are overall much closer to the line for the United States combined. The figures are a graphic representation of the data in Table 2 that use a function of the standard error for precision.
Five-Year Age-Standardized Relative Survival Ratios (RSRs) for All Sites Combined and North American Cancer Survival Index (CSI)a for US Cancer Patients Aged 15 to 99 Years Diagnosed From 2006–2012
| Cancer Registry Jurisdiction | All Sites RSR (95% Confidence Interval) | CSI RSR (95% Confidence Interval) |
|---|---|---|
| United States combined | 64.1 (64.1–64.2) | 63.9 (63.8–63.9) |
| Alabama | 60.5 (60.1–60.8) | 61.4 (61.1–61.8) |
| Alaska | 61.0 (59.8–62.2) | — |
| Arizona | 62.5 (62.2–62.9) | 62.1 (61.8–62.4) |
| California | 65.0 (64.8–65.1) | 63.9 (63.7–64.0) |
| California, Greater Bay Area | 67.1 (66.8–67.4) | 65.3 (65.0–65.6) |
| California, Los Angeles | 63.9 (63.6–64.2) | 63.0 (62.8–63.3) |
| Colorado | 69.3 (68.9–69.7) | 65.8 (65.4–66.1) |
| Connecticut | 66.7 (66.3–67.1) | 65.7 (65.3–66.0) |
| Georgia | 62.7 (62.4–63.0) | 62.4 (62.1–62.7) |
| Georgia, Atlanta | 66.6 (66.1–67.2) | 63.7 (63.2–64.2) |
| Hawaii | 63.0 (62.4–63.7) | 62.7 (62.1–63.3) |
| Idaho | 67.5 (66.8–68.2) | 63.9 (63.3–64.5) |
| Illinois | 64.3 (64.1–64.5) | 64.3 (64.1–64.5) |
| Iowa | 64.1 (63.7–64.6) | 63.8 (63.4–64.2) |
| Kentucky | 59.1 (58.7–59.5) | 62.2 (61.8–62.5) |
| Louisiana | 60.3 (59.9–60.7) | 61.2 (60.8–61.5) |
| Maine | 64.4 (63.8–65.0) | 64.4 (63.8–65.0) |
| Michigan, Detroit | 63.1 (62.7–63.4) | 63.0 (62.6–63.3) |
| Mississippi | 59.6 (59.1–60.1) | 60.6 (60.2–61.1) |
| Montana | 63.9 (63.0–64.7) | — |
| Nebraska | 64.9 (64.3–65.5) | 63.8 (63.2–64.3) |
| New Hampshire | 68.0 (67.3–68.7) | 66.3 (65.8–66.9) |
| New Jersey | 66.0 (65.7–66.2) | 64.5 (64.2–64.7) |
| New Mexico | 63.0 (62.4–63.6) | 61.3 (60.8–61.9) |
| New York | 65.7 (65.5–65.9) | 65.1 (64.9–65.3) |
| North Carolina | 63.9 (63.6–64.2) | 64.0 (63.7–64.2) |
| North Dakota | 68.4 (67.5–69.4) | — |
| Pennsylvania | 64.5 (64.3–64.7) | 64.1 (64.0–64.3) |
| Rhode Island | 66.4 (65.6–67.1) | 65.1 (64.5–65.8) |
| South Carolina | 61.5 (61.2–61.9) | 61.8 (61.5–62.2) |
| Texas | 62.2 (62.0–62.4) | 62.9 (62.7–63.1) |
| Utah | 71.1 (70.5–71.7) | 64.3 (63.7–64.8) |
| Washington, Seattle | 67.3 (66.9–67.6) | 65.9 (65.6–66.3) |
| West Virginia | 59.9 (59.3–60.4) | 62.1 (61.6–62.6) |
| Wisconsin | 65.8 (65.4–66.1) | 64.9 (64.6–65.2) |
| Wyoming | 65.1 (64.0–66.3) | — |
Abbreviation: —, not calculable.
The CSI is the weighted sum of the age-standardized site-specific RSRs, with the weights derived from the proportionate distribution of North American incidence counts for diagnosis years 2006 through 2008.
Five-Year Age-Standardized Relative Survival Ratios (RSRs) for All Sites Combined and North American Cancer Survival Index (CSI)a for US Cancer Patients Aged 15 to 99 Years Diagnosed From 2006 Through 2012, By Race
| Cancer Registry Jurisdiction | White Race | Black Race | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All Sites RSR (95% CI) | CSI (95% CI) | All Sites RSR (95% CI) | CSI (95% CI) | |
| United States combined | 64.7 (64.7–64.8) | 64.4 (64.4–64.5) | 56.8 (56.6–57.0) | 55.9 (55.6–56.1) |
| Alabama | 61.2 (60.7–61.6) | 62.6 (62.2–63.0) | 55.3 (54.5–56.2) | — |
| Alaska | 63.4 (62.0–64.8) | — | 60.0 (52.0–67.1) | — |
| Arizona | 62.3 (61.9–62.6) | 62.0 (61.7–62.3) | 54.9 (52.5–57.2) | — |
| California | 65.2 (65.1–65.4) | 64.0 (63.9–64.2) | 57.1 (56.6–57.7) | 55.7 (55.0–56.4) |
| California, Greater Bay Area | 68.8 (68.4–69.1) | 66.0 (65.6–66.3) | 57.2 (55.9–58.4) | — |
| California, Los Angeles | 64.9 (64.5–65.2) | 63.9 (63.6–64.2) | 56.1 (55.2–57.0) | — |
| Colorado | 68.3 (67.9–68.7) | 65.4 (65.0–65.8) | 62.4 (60.0–64.7) | — |
| Connecticut | 67.0 (66.6–67.4) | 65.9 (65.6–66.3) | 59.6 (57.9–61.2) | — |
| Georgia | 64.1 (63.7–64.4) | 64.0 (63.7–64.3) | 58.1 (57.5–58.8) | 55.5 (54.8–56.3) |
| Georgia, Atlanta | 70.1 (69.5–70.8) | 66.3 (65.7–66.9) | 60.0 (58.9–61.0) | — |
| Hawaii | 68.2 (67.0–69.5) | — | 65.7 (55.2–74.3) | — |
| Idaho | 67.2 (66.5–67.9) | 63.8 (63.1–64.4) | 62.9 (47.8–74.8) | — |
| Illinois | 64.8 (64.6–65.0) | 64.8 (64.6–65.0) | 56.7 (56.1–57.4) | 56.5 (55.8–57.1) |
| Iowa | 64.0 (63.5–64.4) | 63.7 (63.3–64.1) | 53.4 (49.3–57.2) | — |
| Kentucky | 59.3 (58.9–59.6) | 62.3 (62.0–62.7) | 53.8 (52.2–55.4) | — |
| Louisiana | 62.6 (62.1–63.1) | 63.1 (62.7–63.5) | 54.2 (53.4–55.0) | 53.9 (53.1–54.7) |
| Maine | 64.0 (63.4–64.6) | 64.2 (63.6–64.8) | 64.3 (52.0–74.2) | — |
| Michigan, Detroit | 64.5 (64.1–65.0) | 64.3 (63.9–64.7) | 56.1 (55.2–56.9) | 55.4 (54.7–56.2) |
| Mississippi | 61.8 (61.2–62.4) | 63.2 (62.6–63.7) | 54.2 (53.2–55.1) | 53.0 (52.1–53.9) |
| Montana | 64.6 (63.8–65.4) | — | — | — |
| Nebraska | 64.8 (64.2–65.4) | 63.7 (63.1–64.2) | 55.5 (51.9–59.0) | — |
| New Hampshire | 68.0 (67.4–68.7) | 66.4 (65.8–67.0) | 63.6 (50.7–74.0) | — |
| New Jersey | 67.1 (66.8–67.4) | 65.4 (65.2–65.7) | 56.3 (55.4–57.1) | 54.0 (53.2–54.9) |
| New Mexico | 63.3 (62.7–63.9) | 61.4 (60.8–62.0) | 53.1 (47.4–58.5) | — |
| New York | 66.4 (66.2–66.6) | 65.7 (65.6–65.9) | 59.5 (59.1–60.0) | 56.6 (56.1–57.2) |
| North Carolina | 65.1 (64.8–65.3) | 65.1 (64.8–65.4) | 58.4 (57.7–59.0) | 56.9 (56.2–57.6) |
| North Dakota | 69.1 (68.1–70.0) | — | — | — |
| Pennsylvania | 64.5 (64.3–64.7) | 64.3 (64.1–64.5) | 55.8 (55.0–56.6) | 55.7 (55.0–56.5) |
| Rhode Island | 66.2 (65.4–66.9) | 65.1 (64.5–65.8) | 57.6 (53.2–61.7) | — |
| South Carolina | 62.7 (62.3–63.1) | 63.2 (62.8–63.6) | 55.9 (55.1–56.8) | 54.5 (53.7–55.3) |
| Texas | 62.8 (62.6–63.0) | 63.4 (63.2–63.6) | 54.5 (53.9–55.1) | 54.9 (54.2–55.5) |
| Utah | 71.6 (70.9–72.2) | 64.5 (63.9–65.1) | 57.7 (48.9–65.5) | — |
| Washington, Seattle | 68.0 (67.7–68.4) | 66.2 (65.8–66.6) | 59.8 (57.5–62.1) | — |
| West Virginia | 59.9 (59.3–60.4) | 62.2 (61.7–62.7) | 54.6 (51.0–58.1) | — |
| Wisconsin | 66.6 (66.2–66.9) | 65.3 (65.0–65.7) | 55.9 (53.9–57.8) | — |
| Wyoming | 65.4 (64.3–66.6) | — | 58.0 (43.4–70.2) | — |
Abbreviations: —, not calculable; CI, confidence interval.
The CSI is the weighted sum of the age-standardized site-specific RSRs, with the weights derived from the proportionate distribution of North American incidence counts for diagnosis years 2006 through 2008.