Women's Health Reports (Feb 2022)

Rural-Urban Differences in Breast Cancer Stage at Diagnosis

  • Gabrielle LeBlanc,
  • Inkoo Lee,
  • Henry Carretta,
  • Yi Luo,
  • Debajyoti Sinha,
  • George Rust

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1089/WHR.2021.0082
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 207 – 214

Abstract

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Purpose: To analyze the extent to which rural-urban differences in breast cancer stage at diagnosis are explained by factors including age, race, tumor grade, receptor status, and insurance status. Methods: Using the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) 18 database, analysis was performed using data from women aged 50?74 diagnosed with breast cancer between the years 2013 and 2016. Patient rurality of residence was coded according to SEER's Rural-Urban Continuum Code 2013: Large Urban (RUCC 1), Small Urban (RUCC 2,3), and Rural (RUCC 4,5,6,7,8,9). Stage at diagnosis was coded according to SEER's Combined Summary Stage 2000 (2004+) criteria: Localized (0,1), Regional (2,3,4,5), and Distant (7). Descriptive statistics were analyzed, and variations were tested for across rural-urban categories using Kruskall?Wallis and Kendall's tau-b tests. Additionally, odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals for the three ordinal levels of rural-urban residence were calculated while adjusting for other independent variables using ordinal logistic regression. Results: The rural residence category showed the largest proportion of women diagnosed with distant stage breast cancer. Additionally, we determined that patients with residence in both large and small urban areas had statistically significantly lower odds of higher stage diagnosis compared to rural patients even after controlling for age, race, tumor grade, receptor status, and insurance status. Conclusions: Rural women with breast cancer show small but statistically significant disparities in stage-at-diagnosis. Further research is needed to understand local area variation in these disparities across a wide range of rural communities, and to identify the most effective interventions to eliminate these disparities.

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