Literature DB >> 34260594

Socioeconomic disparities in cancer incidence and mortality in England and the impact of age-at-diagnosis on cancer mortality.

Ayşe Arık1,2, Erengul Dodd3, Andrew Cairns1,2, George Streftaris1,2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: We identify socioeconomic disparities by region in cancer morbidity and mortality in England for all-cancer and type-specific cancers, and use incidence data to quantify the impact of cancer diagnosis delays on cancer deaths between 2001-2016. METHODS AND
FINDINGS: We obtain population cancer morbidity and mortality rates at various age, year, gender, deprivation, and region levels based on a Bayesian approach. A significant increase in type-specific cancer deaths, which can also vary among regions, is shown as a result of delay in cancer diagnoses. Our analysis suggests increase of 7.75% (7.42% to 8.25%) in female lung cancer mortality in London, as an impact of 12-month delay in cancer diagnosis, and a 3.39% (3.29% to 3.48%) increase in male lung cancer mortality across all regions. The same delay can cause a 23.56% (23.09% to 24.30%) increase in male bowel cancer mortality. Furthermore, for all-cancer mortality, the highest increase in deprivation gap happened in the East Midlands, from 199 (186 to 212) in 2001, to 239 (224 to 252) in 2016 for males, and from 114 (107 to 121) to 163 (155 to 171) for females. Also, for female lung cancer, the deprivation gap has widened with the highest change in the North West, e.g. for incidence from 180 (172 to 188) to 272 (261 to 282), whereas it has narrowed for prostate cancer incidence with the biggest reduction in the South West from 165 (139 to 190) in 2001 to 95 (72 to 117) in 2016.
CONCLUSIONS: The analysis reveals considerable disparities in all-cancer and some type-specific cancers with respect to socioeconomic status. Furthermore, a significant increase in cancer deaths is shown as a result of delays in cancer diagnoses which can be linked to concerns about the effect of delay in cancer screening and diagnosis during the COVID-19 pandemic. Public health interventions at regional and deprivation level can contribute to prevention of cancer deaths.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 34260594     DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0253854

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


  2 in total

1.  Young-Onset Gastrointestinal Adenocarcinoma Incidence and Survival Trends in the Northern Territory, Australia, with Emphasis on Indigenous Peoples.

Authors:  Mia Shepherdson; Shalem Leemaqz; Gurmeet Singh; Courtney Ryder; Shahid Ullah; Karla Canuto; Joanne P Young; Timothy J Price; Ross A McKinnon; Stephen J Pandol; Claire T Roberts; Savio George Barreto
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-06-10       Impact factor: 6.575

2.  Healthcare vulnerability disparities in pancreatic cancer treatment and mortality using the Korean National Sample Cohort: a retrospective cohort study.

Authors:  Sung Hoon Jeong; Hyeon Ji Lee; Choa Yun; Il Yun; Yun Hwa Jung; Soo Young Kim; Hee Seung Lee; Sung-In Jang
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2022-08-27       Impact factor: 4.638

  2 in total

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