| Literature DB >> 33424226 |
Sunday Azagba1, Lingpeng Shan1, Lauren Manzione1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cancer is the second leading cause of death in the United States. Lifestyle choices such as substance abuse can impact a survivor's health and overall quality of life.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer survivors; alcohol; cigarette; e-cigarette; marijuana; substance use
Year: 2020 PMID: 33424226 PMCID: PMC7756047 DOI: 10.1177/1178221820980470
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Subst Abuse ISSN: 1178-2218
Sample demographic, socioeconomic characteristics, and substance use by cancer diagnosis from Wave 1 (2013/2014) of the PATH study.
| Full sample[ | Diagnosed with cancer | No cancer history | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n | 32 320 | 1527 | 30 717 | |
| Age | <.0001 | |||
| 18-34 | 47.81 (47.27, 48.36) | 9.04 (7.60, 10.48) | 49.78 (49.22, 50.34) | |
| 35-54 | 30.27 (29.76, 30.77) | 28.09 (25.84, 30.35) | 30.37 (29.85, 30.88) | |
| 55+ | 21.92 (21.47, 22.38) | 62.87 (60.44, 65.29) | 19.85 (19.40, 20.30) | |
| Sex | <.0001 | |||
| Male | 50.50 (49.96, 51.05) | 41.25 (38.78, 43.72) | 50.96 (50.40, 51.52) | |
| Female | 49.50 (48.95, 50.04) | 58.75 (56.28, 61.22) | 49.04 (48.48, 49.60) | |
| Race/ethnicity | <.0001 | |||
| Non-Hispanic white | 60.61 (60.08, 61.15) | 79.99 (77.98, 82.00) | 59.67 (59.12, 60.22) | |
| Non-Hispanic black | 14.48 (14.10, 14.87) | 8.53 (7.13, 9.93) | 14.77 (14.38, 15.17) | |
| Hispanic | 17.18 (16.77, 17.59) | 6.36 (5.14, 7.59) | 17.70 (17.27, 18.12) | |
| Non-Hispanic other races | 7.72 (7.43, 8.02) | 5.12 (4.01, 6.22) | 7.86 (7.56, 8.16) | |
| Education | <.0001 | |||
| Less than high school | 13.18 (12.81, 13.55) | 12.22 (10.58, 13.87) | 13.22 (12.84, 13.60) | |
| GED or high school graduate | 30.41 (29.91, 30.92) | 27.40 (25.16, 29.64) | 30.55 (30.04, 31.07) | |
| Some college or associates’ degree | 35.20 (34.68, 35.72) | 33.57 (31.20, 35.95) | 35.29 (34.76, 35.83) | |
| Bachelor’s degree or more | 21.21 (20.76, 21.65) | 26.81 (24.58, 29.03) | 20.93 (20.47, 21.39) | |
| Poverty status | <.0001 | |||
| Below poverty level | 34.08 (33.54, 34.63) | 22.43 (20.20, 24.65) | 34.64 (34.08, 35.20) | |
| At or near poverty level | 23.34 (22.85, 23.82) | 24.50 (22.21, 26.79) | 23.27 (22.77, 23.77) | |
| At or above twice the poverty level | 42.58 (42.01, 43.15) | 53.07 (50.41, 55.73) | 42.09 (41.51, 42.67) | |
| Other tobacco product use | <.0001 | |||
| Yes | 20.63 (20.19, 21.07) | 12.97 (11.28, 14.65) | 21.01 (20.56, 21.47) | |
| No | 79.37 (78.93, 79.81) | 87.03 (85.35, 88.72) | 78.99 (78.53, 79.44) | |
| Region | <.01 | |||
| Northeast | 15.62 (15.22, 16.02) | 14.80 (13.02, 16.58) | 15.66 (15.26, 16.07) | |
| Midwest | 23.79 (23.33, 24.25) | 27.90 (25.65, 30.15) | 23.61 (23.13, 24.08) | |
| South | 37.83 (37.30, 38.36) | 35.04 (32.64, 37.43) | 37.95 (37.41, 38.50) | |
| West | 22.76 (22.30, 23.22) | 22.27 (20.18, 24.35) | 22.78 (22.31, 23.25) |
1The weighted frequency and 95% confidence interval (CI) were reported for all categorical variables. 2Rao-Scott Chi-square tests were used for comparing characteristics between participants with cancer history and without cancer history.
The association of demographic characteristics and substance use behaviors among participants diagnosed with cancer from Wave 1 (2013/2014) to Wave 3 (2015/2016) of the PATH study.
| Cigarette | E-cigarette | Alcohol | Marijuana | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | ||||
| 18-34 |
|
|
|
|
| 35-54 |
|
|
|
|
| 55+ | ref | ref | ref | ref |
| Sex | ||||
| Male | 0.95 (0.75, 1.19) |
| 1.03 (0.84, 1.28) | 1.11 (0.79, 1.55) |
| Female | ref | ref | ref | ref |
| Race/ethnicity | ||||
| Non-Hispanic white | ref | ref | ref | ref |
| Non-Hispanic black | 0.89 (0.62, 1.29) |
| 0.98 (0.70, 1.38) | 1.01 (0.62, 1.66) |
| Hispanic |
| 0.76 (0.43, 1.34) |
| 0.72 (0.39, 1.32) |
| Non-Hispanic other races | 1.04 (0.65, 1.67) | 1.21 (0.67, 2.17) |
| 0.51 (0.25, 1.02) |
| Education | ||||
| Less than High school | ref | ref | ref | ref |
| GED or high school graduate |
| 1.11 (0.67, 1.82) | 1.04 (0.74, 1.46) | 0.74 (0.47, 1.16) |
| Some college or associates’ degree |
| 1.02 (0.61, 1.70) | 1.28 (0.92, 1.79) | 0.82 (0.52, 1.30) |
| Bachelor’s degree or more |
|
|
| 0.62 (0.33, 1.17) |
| Poverty status | ||||
| Below poverty level | ref | ref | ref | ref |
| At or near poverty level |
| 0.92 (0.60, 1.40) |
| 0.80 (0.54, 1.20) |
| At or above twice the poverty level |
| 0.80 (0.51, 1.23) |
|
|
| Other tobacco use | ||||
| Yes |
|
|
|
|
| No | ref | ref | ref | ref |
| Region | ||||
| Northeast | 1.01 (0.71, 1.43) | 0.64 (0.36, 1.12) |
| 1.05 (0.61, 1.82) |
| Midwest | 1.25 (0.95, 1.65) | 0.91 (0.62, 1.35) |
|
|
| South | ref | ref | ref | ref |
| West | 1.03 (0.76, 1.39) | 0.80 (0.53, 1.22) |
|
|
| Survey wave | ||||
| 2013-2014 | ref | ref | ref | ref |
| 2014-2015 | 0.91 (0.76, 1.07) | 1.06 (0.74, 1.53) | 1.01 (0.82, 1.25) | 1.03 (0.71, 1.48) |
| 2015-2016 |
| 0.79 (0.55, 1.12) | 0.87 (0.72, 1.05) | 1.22 (0.88, 1.70) |
Four generalized estimating equation (GEE) models were used to estimate the marginal effects of demographic characteristics on each substance use behavior independently. Significance (p<0.05) and odds ratios (95% confidence interval (CI)) are presented in boldface.
Figure 1.The association between demographic characteristics and substance use behaviors among participants diagnosed with cancer from Wave 1 (2013/2014) to Wave 3 (2015/2016) of the PATH study.
Source: Reference category = “55+” for age, “Female” for sex, “Non-Hispanic white” for race/ethnicity, “Less than high school” for education, and “Below poverty level” for poverty status. Adjusted odds ratios (95% confidence intervals (CIs)) were estimated by the generalized estimating equation (GEE) models presented in Table 2.
Figure 2.Prevalence of substance use among participants with and without cancer history from Wave 1 (2013/2014) to Wave 3 (2015/2016) of the PATH study, stratified by sex.
Source: [1]All prevalences were estimated by using survey wave weights with a targeted population of U.S. non-institutionalized individuals 18 years of age or older at Wave 1 of the survey.
[2] Approximately 3822 aged-up adults (1915 from Wave 2 and 1907 from Wave 3) were included in the prevalence estimation.
[3]All changes of prevalence (Wave 1 to 2, Wave 2 to 3, and Wave 1 to 3) were significant (P < .01).
[4]The prevalence differed significantly between participants with cancer history and those without (P < .001) except for the prevalence of e-cigarette use at Waves 1 (P = .87) and 2 (P = .87), and marijuana at Wave 1 (P = .85).