Frontiers in Oncology (May 2018)

The Role of Race and Economic Characteristics in the Presentation and Survival of Patients With Surgically Resected Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer

  • John M. Varlotto,
  • John M. Varlotto,
  • Kerri McKie,
  • Rickie P. Voland,
  • John C. Flickinger,
  • Malcolm M. DeCamp,
  • Debra Maddox,
  • Paul Stephen Rava,
  • Paul Stephen Rava,
  • Thomas J. Fitzgerald,
  • Thomas J. Fitzgerald,
  • William Walsh,
  • William Walsh,
  • Paulo Oliveira,
  • Paulo Oliveira,
  • Negar Rassaei,
  • Jennifer Baima,
  • Jennifer Baima,
  • Karl Uy,
  • Karl Uy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2018.00146
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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BackgroundLittle is understood regarding the inter-relation between economic, marital, and racial/ethnic differences in presentation and survival of surgically resected lung cancer patients. Our investigation will assess these differences in addition to known therapeutic, patient, and histopathologic factors.MethodsA retrospective review of the Surveillance Epidemiology and End Reporting database was conducted through the years 2007–2012. The population was split into nine different ethnic groups. Population differences were assessed via chi-square testing. Multivariable analysis (MVA) were used to detect overall survival (OS) differences in the total surgical population (TS, N = 35,689) in an ear (T1–T2 < 4 cm N0) surgical population [early-stage resectable (ESR), N = 17,931]. Lung cancer-specific survival (LCSS) was assessed in the ESR.ResultsIn the TS population, as compared to Whites, Blacks, and Hispanics presented with younger age, more adenocarcinomas, lower rates of marriage, lower rates of insurance, less stage I tumors, and had less nodes examined, but their type of surgical procedures and OS/LCSS were the same. MVA demonstrated that lower OS and LCSS were associated with males, single/divorced/widowed partnership, lower income (TS only), and Medicaid insurance. MVA also found that Blacks and Hispanics had a similar OS/LCSS to Whites and that all ethnic groups were associated with a similar or better outcomes. The 90-day mortality and positive nodes were correlated with not having insurance and not being married, but they were not associated with ethnicity.ConclusionIn TS and ESR groups, OS was not different in the two largest ethnic groups (Black and Hispanic) as compared to Whites, but was related to single/widowed/divorced status, Medicaid insurance, and income (TS group only). Nodal positivity was associated with patients who did not have a married partner or insurance suggesting that these factors may impact disease biology. Economic and psychosocial variables may play a role in survival of ear lung cancer in addition to standard histopathologic and treatment variables.

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