Racial disparity in curative treatment and survival from solid-organ cancers

Race is an important prognostic factor affecting allocation to intervention and survival from cancer treatment in the USA. The mechanism of this association is an important area for future investigation.


Introduction
Disparities in cancer care provision often lead to wide heterogeneity in oncological outcomes, which can affect patient outcomes negatively in more vulnerable populations. However, recognizing and understanding factors that influence disparities in cancer care is a necessary first step before intervening to eliminate these disparities.The impact of disparity on receipt of curative cancer treatment and long-term oncological effects remains relatively unknown. Previous small studies have focused on the role of race on survival in single-solid organ malignancy, and failed to explore these associations with outcomes in a broader context 1,2 . Furthermore, previous studies grouped all ethnic minorities together, and therefore lack granularity to identify disparities by individual ethnic minorities (black, Hispanic, Asian, other). As race is often closely associated with other risk factors for unequal access to specialized cancer treatment, such as socioeconomic status, education level, and insurance status 3,4 , any investigation must be performed using data sets that allow accurate adjustment for these factors in the analysis. Therefore, it is imperative to understand the pattern of treatment allocation by race with appropriate confounding factor adjustments.
Using the National Cancer Database (NCDB) from the USA, this study aimed to characterize the impact of race on allocation of curative surgery and neoadjuvant therapy, and long-term survival in patients with non-metastatic cancer across eight common cancers including those of the oesophagus, stomach, liver, pancreas, colon, rectum, breast, and lung.

Methods
The NCDB, a joint project of the Commission on Cancer of the American College of Surgeons and the American Cancer Society 5,6 , was used to identify patients diagnosed with a nonmetastatic solid-organ cancer (oesophageal, gastric, liver, pancreatic, colonic, rectal, breast, and lung) according to the ICD-O-3 codes from 2004 to 2016. Exclusion criteria were: metastatic cancer at diagnosis, other concurrent cancer diagnoses, and palliative treatment. Details of data collected and statistical analysis are available in Appendix S1.

Lay summary
Race is an important prognostic factor affecting receipt of surgical intervention and survival from cancer in the USA. The findings of this study highlight the importance of implementing changes aimed at narrowing the disparities in outcomes between race in patients with cancers. median income, advanced tumour stage (T3 or T4) (Fig. S1a), and node-positive disease (Fig. S1b) across seven of eight cancers studied (Tables S1-S8).

Receipt of curative surgery
Receipt of curative surgery varied from 11.6 to 94.5 per cent for white patients compared with 8.3-93.0 per cent for black race across these cancers ( Table 1). In adjusted analyses, black race was independently associated with significantly lower rates of receipt of surgery compared with white patients for seven of eight  Table 1). Physician recommendation was the most common reason for patients not having surgery across all cancers ( Table S9).

Receipt of neoadjuvant therapy
Receipt of neoadjuvant therapy varied from 2.6 to 37.2 per cent for white patients compared with 2.5 -34.8 per cent for black race across these cancers ( Table 1). In adjusted analyses, black race was independently associated with significantly lower rates of receipt of neoadjuvant therapy than in white patients for six of eight cancers studied ( Table 1).

Long-term survival
Median follow-up for the entire cohort was 25 (i.q.r. 19-36) months. Median survival for patients of black race was significantly shorter than that for white patients across oesophageal (12 versus 19 months), gastric (19 versus 20 months), liver (13 versus 14 months), pancreatic (10 versus 11 months), rectal (80 versus  (Fig. 1). However, Asian or Hispanic race was often associated with significantly lower mortality rates than white race across all non-metastatic solid organ cancers (Fig. 1).  Hazard ratios for overall survival are shown with 95 per cent confidence intervals, for patients with cancer of the oesophagus, stomach, liver, pancreas, colon, rectum, breast, and lung. Cox regression models were adjusted for race, centre volume quintile, facility type, facility location, age at diagnosis, sex, Charlson-Deyo co-morbidity score, insurance status, education level, median income, residence, AJCC clinical T category, and AJCC clinical N category. for receipt of surgery (Table S10), receipt of neoadjuvant therapy (Table S11), and reflect long-term survival than chemotherapy (Table S12).

Discussion
This population-based cohort study of almost 4 million patients with non-metastatic cancer identified race as an important determinant of receipt of curative surgical resection and neoadjuvant therapy, and as a prognostic factor for long-term survival. Black race was associated with advanced T and N category at presentation, and was independently associated with lower rates of receipt of curative surgery, neoadjuvant therapy, and worse survival.
More advanced clinical presentation in ethnic minorities may be secondary to several factors 7,8 . First, poor attendance at screening programmes for specific cancers, and distrust in the healthcare system may result in lower rates of early cancer diagnosis 9,10 . However, discerning which factor is ultimately responsible and driving an interventional change is challenging. Second, a complex interaction between socioeconomic status and access to cancer care may influence delay in presentation of ethnic minorities 9,10 . This may be exacerbated further by COVID. Large initiatives are being rolled out to address these issues.
Previous descriptive, single-region studies have demonstrated lower rates of surgery [11][12][13][14][15] and poor long-term survival 11,16 in black race across different cancers. There may be several explanations for the lower rates of curative surgery and survival in the present study. First, this could be due to refusal to undergo surgical intervention, misunderstanding of treatment guidelines on the part of the treating physician, or contraindications to surgery among black race. Second, previous studies have shown that rates of surgery vary according to socioeconomic status, and it is hypothesized that this is due to communication and financial barriers 17 . Previous reports demonstrated that the likelihood of undergoing surgery increased when travelling more than 5 miles, which may be explained by travel associated with seeking tertiary-care centres 18 . This could adversely affect patients of low socioeconomic status who may be unable to travel for care. Finally, studies of hospital-level variation in surgical practice have demonstrated that regional referral to high-volume centres may have a positive effect on outcomes [19][20][21][22] .
Race is an important prognostic factor affecting receipt of surgical intervention and cancer survival in the USA. The findings of this study highlight the importance of implementing changes aimed at narrowing the disparities in outcomes between race in patients with cancer. Additional prospective analyses are warranted to further investigate the role of race in treatment decision-making and survival, and to identify specific hospital-level factors that affect disease management.
Disclosure. The authors declare no conflict of interest.