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Effect of socioeconomic status on stage at diagnosis of lung cancer in a hospital-based multicenter retrospective clinical epidemiological study in China, 2005-2014.

Authors :
Li, Yuanqiu
Shi, Jufang
Yu, Shicheng
Wang, Le
Liu, Jianjun
Ren, Jiansong
Gao, Shugeng
Hui, Zhouguang
Li, Junling
Wu, Ning
Yang, Boyan
Liu, Shangmei
Qin, Mingfang
Wang, Debin
Liao, Xianzhen
Xing, Xiaojing
Du, Lingbin
Yang, Li
Liu, Yuqin
Zhang, Yongzhen
Source :
Cancer Medicine. Oct2017, Vol. 6 Issue 10, p2440-2452. 13p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

There is inconsistent evidence of associations between socioeconomic status ( SES) and lung cancer stage in non-Chinese populations up to now. We set out to determine how SES affects stage at diagnosis at both individual and area levels, from a hospital-based multicenter 10-year (2005-2014) retrospective clinical epidemiological study of 7184 primary lung cancer patients in mainland China. Individual-level SES data were measured based on two indicators from case report forms of the study: an individual's education and occupation. Seven census indicator variables were used as surrogates for the area-level SES with principal component analysis ( PCA). Multivariate analysis was undertaken using binary logistic regressions and multinomial logit model to describe the association and explore the effect across tertiles on stage after adjusting for demographic variables. There was a significant stepwise gradient of effect across different stages in the highest tertile of area-level SES, comparing with the lowest tertile of area-level SES ( ORs, 0.77, 0.67, and 0.29 for stage II, III, and IV). Patients with higher education were less likely to have stage IV lung cancer, comparing with the illiterate group ( ORs, 0.52, 0.63, 0.71, 0.64 for primary school, middle school, high school, college degree or above subgroup, respectively). Findings suggest that the most socioeconomically deprived areas may be associated with a higher risk of advanced-stage lung cancer, and increasing educational level may be correlated with a lower risk to be diagnosed at advanced stage in both men and women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20457634
Volume :
6
Issue :
10
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cancer Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
125561351
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.1170