Making a case for the socioeconomic determinacy of survival in osteosarcoma Journal Article


Authors: Nathan, S. S.; Healey, J. H.
Article Title: Making a case for the socioeconomic determinacy of survival in osteosarcoma
Abstract: The literature on osteosarcoma survival generally focuses on tumor and treatment variables, although it is unclear whether and how ethnic and socioeconomic factors might influence survival. We therefore investigated the relative contribution of socioeconomic influences together with more traditional tumor-specific factors on osteosarcoma survival. We performed survival analyses on two national databases in two countries. Using multivariable analyses, we compared these with corresponding institution-specific survival to determine if socioeconomic factors might impact osteosarcoma survival. East Asian descent, state-specific treatment, female sex, treatment in the 1990s, low-grade disease, intracompartmental disease, small size, wide resections as opposed to forequarter or hindquarter amputations, and single primaries were good prognostic factors. Survival was better in the more affluent states. Males were affected at an older age than females. Blacks tended to have larger tumors, although their overall survival was similar to whites. East Asians were more likely to be treated in the 1990s with wide resections for smaller tumors and were located around states associated with good treatment. East Asians in Singapore and the United States had the same survival. Survival in East Asians in Singapore was similar to that of other races. The provision of health care for osteosarcoma varies greatly across the United States but is uniform in the socialized medical system in Singapore. Hence, the observed differences in the United States were likely the result of socioeconomic factors. Our analysis suggests ethnic and economic bias may influence survival in osteosarcoma and should receive greater attention in the collective literature on survival analyses. Level II, prognostic study. See the Guidelines for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.
Keywords: osteosarcoma; adolescent; adult; child; preschool child; treatment outcome; bone neoplasms; child, preschool; bone tumor; survival rate; retrospective studies; young adult; mortality; united states; proportional hazards models; age factors; pathology; retrospective study; time; time factors; age; economics; proportional hazards model; infant; multicenter study; amputation; cancer registry; seer program; chi-square distribution; cross-sectional study; cross-sectional studies; multivariate analysis; sex difference; kaplan meier method; sex factors; socioeconomics; socioeconomic factors; income; race; osteotomy; continental population groups; chi square distribution; ethnology; kaplan-meier estimate; singapore
Journal Title: Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research
Volume: 471
Issue: 3
ISSN: 0009-921X
Publisher: Springer  
Date Published: 2013-03-01
Start Page: 784
End Page: 791
Language: English
DOI: 10.1007/s11999-012-2575-1
PUBMED: 22972655
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC3563779
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 21 May 2013" - "Source: Scopus"
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. John H Healey
    547 Healey
Related MSK Work