Socioeconomic Environment and Survival in Patients with Digestive Cancers: A French Population-Based Study

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TitreSocioeconomic Environment and Survival in Patients with Digestive Cancers: A French Population-Based Study
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuteursTron L, Fauvernier M, Bouvier A-M, Robaszkiewicz M, Bouvier V, Cariou M, Jooste V, Dejardin O, Remontet L, Alves A, Molinie F, Launoy G, Grp FRANCIM
JournalCANCERS
Volume13
Pagination5156
Date PublishedOCT
Type of ArticleArticle
Mots-cléscancer net survival, Deprivation, Digestive cancers, French cancer registries, social gradient
Résumé

Simple Summary Studies investigating the social gradient in digestive cancer survival are scarce, and the statistical methods used do not always consider important assumptions in survival analysis for adequate assessment. Using an ecological index (European Deprivation Index), we found a negative impact of social environment in digestive cancers net survival (especially for esophagus, stomach, bile ducts among females; colon and rectum for both sexes) and provided insight into how this social gradient in cancer survival builds up, and at what time of follow-up it appears. These results can guide clinical practice/public health actions to address social inequalities in survival by targeting digestive cancers with the greatest impact and identifying key follow-up periods to implement actions. Social inequalities are an important prognostic factor in cancer survival, but little is known regarding digestive cancers specifically. We aimed to provide in-depth analysis of the contextual social disparities in net survival of patients with digestive cancer in France, using population-based data and relevant modeling. Digestive cancers (n = 54,507) diagnosed between 2006-2009, collected through the French network of cancer registries, were included (end of follow-up 30 June 2013). Social environment was assessed by the European Deprivation Index. Multidimensional penalized splines were used to model excess mortality hazard. We found that net survival was significantly worse for individuals living in a more deprived environment as compared to those living in a less deprived one for esophageal, liver, pancreatic, colon and rectal cancers, and for stomach and bile duct cancers among females. Excess mortality hazard was up to 57% higher among females living in the most deprived areas (vs. least deprived) at 1 year of follow-up for bile duct cancer, and up to 21% higher among males living in the most deprived areas (vs. least deprived) regarding colon cancer. To conclude, we provide a better understanding of how the (contextual) social gradient in survival is constructed, offering new perspectives for tackling social inequalities in digestive cancer survival.

DOI10.3390/cancers13205156