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Estimating the impact of a cancer diagnosis on life expectancy by socio-economic group for a range of cancer types in England

Background: Differences in cancer survival exist across socio-economic groups for many cancer types. Standard metrics fail to show the overall impact for patients and the population. Methods: The available data consist of a population of ∼2.5 million patients and include all patients recorded as bei...

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Published in:British journal of cancer 2017-10, Vol.117 (9), p.1419-1426
Main Authors: Syriopoulou, Elisavet, Bower, Hannah, Andersson, Therese M-L, Lambert, Paul C, Rutherford, Mark J
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description Background: Differences in cancer survival exist across socio-economic groups for many cancer types. Standard metrics fail to show the overall impact for patients and the population. Methods: The available data consist of a population of ∼2.5 million patients and include all patients recorded as being diagnosed with melanoma, prostate, bladder, breast, colon, rectum, lung, ovarian and stomach cancers in England between 1998 and 2013. We estimated the average loss in expectation of life per patient in years and the proportion of life lost for a range of cancer types, separately by deprivation group. In addition, estimates for the total number of years lost due to each cancer were also obtained. Results: Lung and stomach cancers result in the highest overall loss for males and females in all deprivation groups in terms of both absolute life years lost and loss as a proportion of expected life remaining. Female lung cancer patients in the least- and most-deprived group lose 14.4 and 13.8 years on average, respectively, that is translated as 86.1% and 87.3% of their average expected life years remaining. Melanoma, prostate and breast cancers have the lowest overall loss. On the basis of the number of patients diagnosed in 2013, lung cancer results in the most life years lost in total followed by breast cancer. Melanoma and bladder cancer account for the lowest total life years lost. Conclusions: There are wide differences in the impact of cancer on life expectancy across deprivation groups, and for most cancers the most affluent lose less years.
doi_str_mv 10.1038/bjc.2017.300
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Standard metrics fail to show the overall impact for patients and the population. Methods: The available data consist of a population of ∼2.5 million patients and include all patients recorded as being diagnosed with melanoma, prostate, bladder, breast, colon, rectum, lung, ovarian and stomach cancers in England between 1998 and 2013. We estimated the average loss in expectation of life per patient in years and the proportion of life lost for a range of cancer types, separately by deprivation group. In addition, estimates for the total number of years lost due to each cancer were also obtained. Results: Lung and stomach cancers result in the highest overall loss for males and females in all deprivation groups in terms of both absolute life years lost and loss as a proportion of expected life remaining. Female lung cancer patients in the least- and most-deprived group lose 14.4 and 13.8 years on average, respectively, that is translated as 86.1% and 87.3% of their average expected life years remaining. Melanoma, prostate and breast cancers have the lowest overall loss. On the basis of the number of patients diagnosed in 2013, lung cancer results in the most life years lost in total followed by breast cancer. Melanoma and bladder cancer account for the lowest total life years lost. 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subjects 631/67/2324
692/308/174
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Biomedicine
Bladder cancer
Breast cancer
Cancer Research
Colon
Colorectal cancer
Diagnosis
Drug Resistance
Epidemiology
Female
Females
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Life Expectancy
Life span
Lung cancer
Male
Males
Medical diagnosis
Medicin och hälsovetenskap
Melanoma
Middle Aged
Molecular Medicine
Neoplasm Staging
Neoplasms - diagnosis
Neoplasms - mortality
Oncology
Prognosis
Prostate
Prostate cancer
Rectum
Registries - statistics & numerical data
Socioeconomic Factors
Socioeconomics
Stomach
Survival Rate
Urinary bladder
title Estimating the impact of a cancer diagnosis on life expectancy by socio-economic group for a range of cancer types in England
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