Poverty and childhood cancer incidence in the United States

被引:0
作者
I-Jen Pan
Julie L. Daniels
Kangmin Zhu
机构
[1] Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences,Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Department of Preventive Medicine and Biometrics
[2] United States Military Cancer Institute,Walter Reed Army Medical Center
[3] University of North Carolina,Department of Epidemiology
[4] University of North Carolina,Department of Maternal and Child Health
来源
Cancer Causes & Control | 2010年 / 21卷
关键词
Childhood cancer; Poverty; SEER; Incidence; Epidemiology;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This study examined socioeconomic differentials in cancer incidence rates during 2000–2005 among children aged 0–19 in the United States. The data on childhood cancers, which were classified by the International Classification of Childhood Cancer, Third Edition (ICCC-3), were obtained from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results program. The socioeconomic status of residential area at diagnosis was estimated by county-level poverty rate in Census 2000, i.e., percentage of persons in the county living below the national poverty thresholds. Counties were categorized as low-, medium-, and high-poverty areas when the poverty rates were <10, 10–19.99, and 20% or higher, respectively. The results showed that medium- and high-poverty counties had lower age-adjusted incidence rates than low-poverty counties for total childhood cancers combined, central nervous system neoplasms (ICCC group III), neuroblastoma (group IV), renal tumors (group VI), and other malignant epithelial neoplasms and malignant melanomas (group XI). When the data were stratified by race, these associations were observed among whites, but not blacks. For leukemia (group I), poor counties had higher incidence rates than affluent counties for whites, but lower rates for blacks. This ecologic study provides perspective on area socioeconomic variations in childhood cancer incidence that warrants further research.
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页码:1139 / 1145
页数:6
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