收据
民族
种族(生物学)
癌症
医学
结直肠癌
种族与健康
老年学
健康的社会决定因素
内科学
社会学
护理部
公共卫生
万维网
计算机科学
性别研究
人类学
作者
Edward C. Tobin,Erica Dobbs,Stacie Deslich,Bryan K. Richmond
出处
期刊:American Surgeon
[SAGE Publishing]
日期:2024-03-29
卷期号:90 (6): 1475-1480
被引量:1
标识
DOI:10.1177/00031348241241697
摘要
Introduction Rates of appropriate surgical treatment of colon cancer are historically worse in traditionally marginalized populations. We sought to examine which social determinants of health may be associated with longer time to appropriate operative intervention. Methods The National Cancer Databank was queried for this retrospective study. Adult patients (18 to 90 years of age) diagnosed between 2004 and 2018 with single or primary, stage III colon cancer were included. Patient demographic variables included age at diagnosis, sex, ethnicity (Hispanic or non-Hispanic), comorbidity score, median household income, education status, rural/urban status, treatment facility type and location, and insurance status. Disease characteristics include stage (stage 3), primary site, surgical margins, tumor size, and number of nodes resected. Reported descriptive statistics include means and 95% confidence intervals for continuous variables and frequency and proportions for categorical variables. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed. Results A total of 134,601 individuals diagnosed with stage 3 colon cancer were included. Time to surgery in all cases had a mean of 26.4 ± 19.0 days. Multivariate analysis of time to surgery indicated that receiving surgery at a Community Cancer Program, Charlson-Deyo Score of 0, younger age, and non-Hispanic-White race/ethnicity are associated with decreased time to surgery ( P < .001). Conclusion Patients who receive surgery at a Community Cancer Program, have fewer comorbidities, have lower household income, are younger, and receive surgery within 50 miles of their primary residence are more likely to have timely surgery.
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