National cancer system characteristics and prostate cancer outcomes: An analysis of global data Journal Article


Authors: Dee, E. C.; Iyengar, R.; Narayan, A.; Feliciano, E. J. G.; Wu, J. F.; Ho, F. D. V.; Ng, K.; Willmann, J.; Cabaero, M. L. L.; Tan, A. K. N. G.; Lapen, K.; Gorovets, D.; Rathkopf, D. E.; McBride, S. M.; Nagar, H.; Mahal, B. A.; Nguyen, P. L.
Article Title: National cancer system characteristics and prostate cancer outcomes: An analysis of global data
Abstract: Importance and Objective: Prostate cancer is the second most common cancer among men globally and the number of cases is expected to double from 2020 to 2040. A greater understanding of health system factors that can be leveraged to improve prostate cancer control may guide health system planning in anticipation of the growing global burden of prostate cancer. Design: This ecological cross-sectional study made use of the most recent available national health system metrics for countries with prostate cancer incidence and mortality estimates available from the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). IARC data represent the most updated estimates as of April 2025. Main Outcomes: National estimates of age-standardized mortality-to-incidence ratios (MIR) were derived from the GLOBOCAN 2022 database for male patients with prostate cancer of all ages. Health spending as a percent of gross domestic product, physicians per 1000 population, nurses and midwives per 1000 population, surgical workforce per 1000 population, gross domestic product (GDP) per capita, Universal Health Coverage Service Coverage Index (UHC index), availability of pathology services, human development index (HDI), gender inequality index, and number of radiotherapy centers per 1000 population were collected. The association between prostate MIR and each metric was evaluated using simple univariable linear regression models. Those with p < 0.005 (Bonferroni corrected) were included in multivariable models. Variation inflation factor analysis facilitated exclusion of variables with significant multicollinearity. R2 defined goodness of fit. Results: Based on IARC estimate availability, data for 185 countries were collected; data availability ranged from 144 (77.8%, surgical workforce per 1000 population known) to 185 (100%, GDP per capita, RT centers per 1000 population). On univariable analysis, each of the 10 metrics was significantly associated with MIR of prostate cancer (< 0.001 forall). All but one (HDI, due to mutlicollinearity) were included in the multivariable model. The final multivariable model included 123 countries with complete data. Of those included in the regression with complete data, 44 of 123 (35.8%) were high-income countries; of those excluded due to incomplete data, 16 of 62 (25.8%) were high-income countries (χ2 p = 0.17 comparing the proportion of high-income countries in the included and excluded groups). Therefore, the following variables were independently associated with lower (improved) MIR for prostate cancer: (1) surgical workforce per 1000 population, (2) UHC index, (3) radiotherapy centers per 1000 population, (4) GDP per capita. The final model had R2 of 0.8408. Conclusions and Relevance: Analysis of global data and health-system metrics suggest that surgical workforce, degree of UHC, availability of radiotherapy centers, and GDP per capita are independently associated with improved prostate cancer outcomes. In leveraging individual countries' health systems as data points, these findings may guide health system planning and prioritization. Efforts to strengthen access to surgery and radiotherapy in the context of broader and equitable cancer system strengthening may represent concrete points of action for public health efforts, given the growing global burden of prostate cancer. © 2025 Wiley Periodicals LLC.
Keywords: aged; middle aged; major clinical study; mortality; outcome assessment; cancer incidence; incidence; risk factor; cancer mortality; prostate cancer; prostatic neoplasms; prostate tumor; cancer registry; health care system; cross-sectional study; cross-sectional studies; cancer control; epidemiology; therapy; workforce; health disparity; global health; nurse; mortality rate; gross national product; human development; humans; human; male; article; health equity; global oncology; midwife; gender inequality; universal health care; health systems; prostate cancer disparities
Journal Title: Prostate
Volume: 85
Issue: 10
ISSN: 0270-4137
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons  
Date Published: 2025-07-01
Start Page: 947
End Page: 953
Language: English
DOI: 10.1002/pros.24901
PUBMED: 40235173
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: The MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) is acknowledged in the PubMed record and PDF. Corresponding MSK author is Edward Christopher Dee -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Dana Elizabeth Rathkopf
    274 Rathkopf
  2. Sean Matthew McBride
    297 McBride
  3. Kaitlyn Ann Lapen
    39 Lapen
  4. Edward Christopher Dee
    264 Dee
  5. Himanshu Nagar
    6 Nagar