학술논문

Age and cancer type: associations with increased odds of receiving a late diagnosis in people with advanced cancer.
Document Type
Article
Source
BMC Cancer. 11/30/2023, Vol. 23 Issue 1, p1-7. 7p.
Subject
*DELAYED diagnosis
*CANCER patients
*CANCER diagnosis
*LUNG cancer
*ODDS ratio
*OVARIAN cancer
Language
ISSN
1471-2407
Abstract
Purpose: In order to deliver appropriate and timely care planning and minimise avoidable late diagnoses, clinicians need to be aware of which patients are at higher risk of receiving a late cancer diagnosis. We aimed to determine which demographic and clinical factors are associated with receiving a 'late' cancer diagnosis (within the last 12 weeks of life). Method: Retrospective cohort study of 2,443 people who died from cancer ('cancer decedents') in 2013–2015. Demographic and cancer registry datasets linked using patient-identifying Community Health Index numbers. Analysis used binary logistic regression, with univariate and adjusted odds ratios (SPSS v25). Results: One third (n = 831,34.0%) received a late diagnosis. Age and cancer type were significantly associated with late cancer diagnosis (p < 0.001). Other demographic factors were not associated with receiving a late diagnosis. Cancer decedents with lung cancer (Odds Ratios presented in abstract are the inverse of those presented in the main text, where lung cancer is the reference category. Presented as 1/(OR multivariate)) were more likely to have late diagnosis than those with bowel (95% Confidence Interval [95%CI] Odds Ratio (OR)1.52 (OR1.12 to 2.04)), breast or ovarian (95%CI OR3.33 (OR2.27 to 5.0) or prostate (95%CI OR9.09 (OR4.0 to 20.0)) cancers. Cancer decedents aged > 85 years had higher odds of late diagnosis (95%CI OR3.45 (OR2.63 to 4.55)), compared to those aged < 65 years. Conclusions: Cancer decedents who were older and those with lung cancer were significantly more likely to receive late cancer diagnoses than those who were younger or who had other cancer types. Key messages: • One third (n=831,34.0%) of cancer decedents had late diagnoses (within the last 12 weeks of life). • Cancer decedents with lung cancer had higher odds of late diagnosis than those with other cancers. • Cancer decedents >85 years old were 3 times more likely to have late diagnoses than those <65 years old. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]