From the Journals

Racial and economic disparities persist in endometrial cancer care


 

FROM OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY

Women who were Black, Latina, American Indian, or Alaska Native were significantly less likely than White women to receive guidelines-adherent treatment for endometrial cancer, based on data from more than 80,000 women.

The incidence of uterine cancer has increased across all ethnicities in recent decades, and adherence to the National Comprehensive Cancer Network treatment guidelines has been associated with improved survival, wrote Victoria A. Rodriguez, MSW, MPH, of the University of California, Irvine, and colleagues. “To date, however, there are few studies that have looked at endometrial cancer disparities with adherence to National Comprehensive Cancer Network treatment guidelines.”

In a retrospective study published in Obstetrics & Gynecology, the researchers used data from the SEER (Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results) database between Jan. 1, 2006, and Dec. 31, 2015. The study population included 83,883 women aged 18 years and older who were diagnosed with their first or only endometrial carcinoma. The primary dependent variable was adherence to the NCCN guidelines for the initial course of treatment, which included a combination of therapies based on cancer subtype and the extent of the disease, the researchers said.

The researchers combined the guidelines and the corresponding data from the SEER database to create “a binary variable representing adherence to [NCCN] guidelines (1 = adherent treatment, 0 = nonadherent treatment).”

Approximately 60% of the total patient population received guidelines-adherent treatment. In a multivariate analysis, Black women, Latina women, and American Indian or Alaska Native women were significantly less likely than White women to receive such treatment (odds ratios, 0.88, 0.92, and 0.82, respectively), controlling for factors including neighborhood socioeconomic status, age, and stage at diagnosis, year of diagnosis, histology, and disease grade. Asian women and Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander women were significantly more likely to received guidelines-adherent treatment, compared with White women (OR, 1.14 and 1.19, respectively).

The researchers also found a significant gradient in guidelines-adherent treatment based on neighborhood socioeconomic status. Relative to the highest neighborhood socioeconomic status group, women in the lower groups had significantly lower odds of receiving guidelines-adherent treatment, with ORs of 0.89, 0.84, 0.80, and 0.73, respectively, for the high-middle neighborhood socioeconomic group, the middle group, the low-middle group, and the lowest group (P < .001 for all).

“Our study is novel in that it examines neighborhood socioeconomic disparities in the understudied context of treatment adherence for endometrial cancer,” the researchers noted.

The study findings were limited by several factors in including the retrospective design and potential for unmeasured confounding variables not included in SEER, such as hospital and physician characteristics, the researchers said. Also, the SEER data set was limited to only the first course of treatment, and did not include information on patient comorbidities that might affect treatment.

“Future research should qualitatively explore reasons for nonadherent treatment within endometrial cancer and other cancer sites among various racial-ethnic groups and socioeconomic status groups, with special attention to low-income women of color,” the researchers emphasized. More research on the impact of comorbidities on a patient’s ability to receive guidelines-based care should be used to inform whether comorbidities should be part of the NCCN guidelines.

However, the results were strengthened by the large sample size and diverse population, so the findings are generalizable to the overall U.S. population, the researchers said.

“Interventions are needed to ensure that equitable cancer treatment practices are available for all individuals regardless of their racial-ethnic or socioeconomic backgrounds,” they concluded.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Endometrial thickness could predict cancer, guide lymph node assessment
MDedge ObGyn
Can a once-daily oral formulation treat symptoms of uterine fibroids without causing hot flashes or bone loss?
MDedge ObGyn
FDA approves new immunotherapy for endometrial cancer
MDedge ObGyn
Surgery for early-stage cervical cancer: Are we still too radical?
MDedge ObGyn
Success in LGBTQ+ medicine requires awareness of risk
MDedge ObGyn
For cervical cancer screening, any strategy is acceptable
MDedge ObGyn
FDA and power morcellation, gel for vaginal odor, and an intrauterine electrosurgery system
MDedge ObGyn
Cervical cancer rates fall, but other HPV cancers increase
MDedge ObGyn
Decision making regarding LEEP versus cone biopsy for excision of cervical dysplasia
MDedge ObGyn
How to choose the right vaginal moisturizer or lubricant for your patient
MDedge ObGyn