| Literature DB >> 29447263 |
Sarah C Markt1, Tianyu Tang1, Angel M Cronin2,3, Ingrid T Katz3,4,5, Brooke E Howitt3,6, Neil S Horowitz2,4,7, Larissa J Lee2,3,8, Alexi A Wright2,3,4.
Abstract
Cervical cancer outcomes remain poor among disadvantaged populations, including ethnic minorities, low-income, and underinsured women. The aim of this study was to evaluate the mechanisms that underlie the observed association between race/ethnicity and cervical cancer survival. We identified 13,698 women, ages 21 to 64 years, diagnosed with stages I-III primary cervical cancer between 2007-2013 in Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER). Multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression models evaluated associations between race/ethnicity (Non-Hispanic White, Non-Hispanic Black, Hispanic, Other) and cervical cancer-specific mortality. We conducted mediation analysis to calculate the mediation proportion and its 95% confidence interval. Non-Hispanic black women had an increased risk of cervical cancer-specific mortality (HR: 1.23, 95% CI: 1.08-1.39), and Hispanic women a decreased risk of dying from their disease (HR: 0.82, 95% CI: 0.72-0.93), compared with non-Hispanic white. The estimated proportion of excess cervical cancer mortality for non-Hispanic black women relative to non-Hispanic white women that was mediated by insurance was 18.6% and by treatment was 47.2%. Furthermore, non-Hispanic black women were more likely to receive radiation and less likely to receive surgery for early-stage disease. In this population-based study we found that some of the excess cervical cancer-specific mortality for non-Hispanic black women is mediated by factors such as insurance status and treatment. These findings suggest that enhancing existing insurance coverage and ensuring equal and adequate treatment in all women may be a key strategy for improving cervical cancer outcomes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29447263 PMCID: PMC5814056 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0193047
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Sociodemographic and clinical characteristics by race of women with cervical cancer in SEER, 2007–2013.
| Characteristics | Non-Hispanic White | Non-Hispanic | Hispanic | Other |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (n = 7,234) | (n = 1,823) | (n = 3,323) | (n = 1,318) | |
| Private | 5,133 (71%) | 900 (49%) | 1,397 (42%) | 839 (64%) |
| Medicaid | 1,631 (23%) | 705 (39%) | 1,500 (45%) | 405 (31%) |
| Uninsured | 470 (7%) | 218 (12%) | 426 (13%) | 74 (6%) |
| 21–34 | 1,417 (20%) | 318 (17%) | 767 (23%) | 185 (14%) |
| 35–44 | 2,451 (34%) | 557 (31%) | 1,182 (36%) | 410 (31%) |
| 45–54 | 2,017 (28%) | 561 (31%) | 876 (26%) | 411 (31%) |
| 55–64 | 1,349 (19%) | 387 (21%) | 498 (15%) | 312 (24%) |
| 2007 | 1,093 (15%) | 268 (15%) | 486 (15%) | 196 (15%) |
| 2008 | 1,063 (15%) | 274 (15%) | 495 (15%) | 175 (13%) |
| 2009 | 1,083 (15%) | 267 (15%) | 489 (15%) | 172 (13%) |
| 2010 | 1,043 (14%) | 253 (14%) | 473 (14%) | 193 (15%) |
| 2011 | 1,027 (14%) | 249 (14%) | 468 (14%) | 178 (14%) |
| 2012 | 969 (13%) | 261 (14%) | 468 (14%) | 198 (15%) |
| 2013 | 956 (13%) | 251 (14%) | 444 (13%) | 206 (16%) |
| Unmarried | 3,612 (50%) | 1,388 (76%) | 1,871 (56%) | 552 (42%) |
| Married | 3,622 (50%) | 435 (24%) | 1,452 (44%) | 766 (58%) |
| West | 3,205 (44%) | 407 (22%) | 2,707 (81%) | 1,139 (86%) |
| Northeast | 1,100 (15%) | 319 (18%) | 397 (12%) | 97 (7%) |
| South | 2,217 (31%) | 871 (48%) | 166 (5%) | 58 (4%) |
| Midwest | 712 (10%) | 226 (12%) | 53 (2%) | 24 (2%) |
| Metropolitan | 6,109 (85%) | 1,667 (91%) | 3,228 (97%) | 1,224 (93%) |
| Quartile 1 (<78%) | 1,377 (19%) | 357 (20%) | 1,353 (41%) | 318 (24%) |
| Quartile 2 (78%-85%) | 1,665 (23%) | 682 (37%) | 876 (26%) | 204 (15%) |
| Quartile 3 (86%-88%) | 1,802 (25%) | 492 (27%) | 681 (20%) | 373 (28%) |
| Quartile 4 (>88%) | 2,390 (33%) | 292 (16%) | 413 (12%) | 423 (32%) |
| Quartile 1 (<$59,530) | 2,101 (29%) | 704 (39%) | 501 (15%) | 100 (8%) |
| Quartile 2 ($59530-$64019) | 1,267 (18%) | 438 (24%) | 1,336 (40%) | 346 (26%) |
| Quartile 3 ($64020-$79960) | 2,029 (28%) | 409 (22%) | 728 (22%) | 294 (22%) |
| Quartile 4 (>$79960) | 1,837 (25%) | 272 (15%) | 758 (23%) | 578 (44%) |
| I | 4,332 (60%) | 844 (46%) | 1,869 (56%) | 723 (55%) |
| II | 912 (13%) | 326 (18%) | 427 (13%) | 198 (15%) |
| III | 1,582 (22%) | 502 (28%) | 786 (24%) | 328 (25%) |
| Unknown | 408 (5%) | 151 (8%) | 241 (7%) | 69 (5%) |
| Squamous cell carcinoma | 4,594 (64%) | 1,463 (80%) | 2,251 (68%) | 836 (63%) |
| Adenocarcinoma | 1,357 (19%) | 126 (7%) | 546 (16%) | 242 (19%) |
| Other | 1,283 (18%) | 234 (13%) | 526 (16%) | 240 (18%) |
| I: Well differentiated | 953 (13%) | 132 (7%) | 362 (11%) | 164 (12%) |
| II: Moderately differentiated | 2,369 (33%) | 576 (32%) | 1,072 (32%) | 397 (30%) |
| III-IV: Poorly differentiated or undifferentiated | 1,914 (26%) | 555 (30%) | 974 (29%) | 375 (28%) |
| Unknown | 1,998 (28%) | 560 (31%) | 915 (28%) | 382 (29%) |
1County-level data: percent of population with high school completion and median household income
Association between race and all-cause and cervical cancer mortality, among women diagnosed with stage I-III disease in SEER 2007–2013.
| Non-Hispanic White | Non-Hispanic Black | Hispanic | Other | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N cases | 1143 | 453 | 441 | 171 |
| HR (95% CI) | Ref. | 1.23 (1.09–1.38) | 0.80 (0.71–0.91) | 0.85 (0.72–1.01) |
| N cases | 975 | 381 | 397 | 153 |
| HR (95% CI) | Ref. | 1.23 (1.08–1.39) | 0.82 (0.72–0.93) | 0.88 (0.74–1.05) |
*Adjusted for insurance status, stage, treatment, age, year of diagnosis, marital status, tumor grade, geographic region, urban/rural residence, histology, education and income.
Proportion mediated of the association between race and cervical cancer mortality by socioeconomic and clinical variables, among women diagnosed with stages I-III disease in SEER 2007–2013*.
| Non-Hispanic White | Non-Hispanic Black | Hispanic | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Insurance | Ref. | 18.6% (11.8%-28.2%) | ----- |
| p <0.001 | |||
| Marital Status | Ref. | 14.6% (8.7%-23.5%) | 2.0% (0.0%-72.0%) |
| p <0.001 | p = 0.34 | ||
| Education | Ref. | 6.2% (2.7%-13.8%) | ----- |
| p = 0.004 | |||
| Income | Ref. | 2.7% (0.6%-11.4%) | ----- |
| p = 0.08 | |||
| Region | Ref. | 8.1% (3.0%-20.0%) | 23.8% (10.3%-46.0%) |
| p = 0.01 | p <0.001 | ||
| Stage at diagnosis (Stages I, II, III) | Ref. | 22.0% (8.4%-46.5%) | 10.3% (0.6%-69.1%) |
| p = 0.01 | p = 0.23 | ||
| Treatment | Ref. | 47.2% (27.9%-67.4%) | ----- |
| p <0.001 |
*Other race removed because none of the factors were mediators
1 All mediation models are mutually adjusted for the other potential mediators (i.e. the model for mediation by insurance status is adjusted for marital status, education, income, region, stage and treatment), and age and year at diagnosis.
2 ----- = Not mediated
Treatment given for cervical cancer by race, stratified by stage of disease at diagnosis.
| EBRT + Brachytherapy | 482 (11%) | 109 (13%) | 167 (9%) | 59 (8%) |
| EBRT alone | 468 (11%) | 128 (15%) | 238 (13%) | 86 (12%) |
| Brachy alone | 75 (2%) | 41 (5%) | 47 (3%) | 14 (2%) |
| Radiation NOS | 3 (0.1%) | 3 (0.4%) | 10 (0.5%) | 1 (0.1%) |
| No radiation | 3,228 (75%) | 543 (64%) | 1,388 (74%) | 552 (76%) |
| Unknown/refused | 76 (2%) | 20 (2%) | 19 (1%) | 11 (2%) |
| No surgery | 378 (9%) | 142 (17%) | 231 (12%) | 57 (8%) |
| Radical hysterectomy | 715 (17%) | 96 (11%) | 294 (16%) | 144 (20%) |
| Local destruction | 726 (17%) | 154 (18%) | 281 (15%) | 125 (17%) |
| TAH | 592 (14%) | 95 (11%) | 276 (15%) | 75 (10%) |
| TAH-BSO | 943 (22%) | 199 (24%) | 417 (22%) | 164 (23%) |
| Modified radical and/or extended hysterectomy | 714 (16%) | 105 (12%) | 288 (15%) | 121 (17%) |
| Hysterectomy NOS | 235 (5%) | 48 (6%) | 75 (4%) | 34 (5%) |
| Pelvic exenteration | 4 (0.1%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (0.1%) | 1 (0.1%) |
| Surgery NOS | 9 (0.2%) | 1 (0.1%) | 1 (0.1%) | 1 (0.1%) |
| Surgery Unknown | 5 (0.2%) | 1 (0.1%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| Other | 11 (0.3) | 3 (0.4%) | 5 (0.3%) | 1 (0.1%) |
| EBRT + Brachytherapy | 1,152 (46%) | 304 (37%) | 487 (40%) | 228 (43%) |
| EBRT alone | 912 (37%) | 337 (41%) | 489 (40%) | 191 (36%) |
| Brachy alone | 200 (8%) | 83 (10%) | 111 (9%) | 44 (8%) |
| Radiation NOS | 13 (0.5%) | 8 (1%) | 11 (1%) | 5 (1%) |
| No radiation | 170 (7%) | 70 (8%) | 95 (8%) | 48 (9%) |
| Unknown/refused | 47 (2%) | 26 (3%) | 20 (2%) | 10 (2%) |
| No surgery | 1,575 (63%) | 621 (75%) | 798 (66%) | 331 (63%) |
| Radical hysterectomy | 199 (8%) | 25 (3%) | 101 (8%) | 54 (10%) |
| Local destruction | 213 (9%) | 85 (10%) | 92 (8%) | 35 (7%) |
| TAH | 33 (1%) | 10 (1%) | 29 (2%) | 6 (1%) |
| TAH-BSO | 206 (8%) | 37 (4%) | 85 (7%) | 54 (11%) |
| Modified radical and/or extended hysterectomy | 176 (7%) | 29 (4%) | 67 (6%) | 30 (6%) |
| Hysterectomy NOS | 60 (2%) | 15 (2%) | 27 (2%) | 10 (2%) |
| Pelvic exerteration | 10 (0.4%) | 1 (0.1%) | 3 (0.3%) | 1 (0.2%) |
| Surgery NOS | 14 (0.6%) | 3 (0.4%) | 10 (0.8%) | 5 (1%) |
| Surgery Unknown | 5 (0.2%) | 2 (0.2%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| Other | 3 (0.1%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (0.1%) | 0 (0%) |