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The first year counts: cancer survival among Indigenous and non‐Indigenous Queenslanders, 1997–2006
Author(s) -
Cramb Susanna M,
Garvey Gail,
Valery Patricia C,
Williamson John D,
Baade Peter D
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
medical journal of australia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.904
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1326-5377
pISSN - 0025-729X
DOI - 10.5694/mja11.11194
Subject(s) - indigenous , socioeconomic status , demography , disadvantage , medicine , hazard ratio , population , cancer , geography , gerontology , confidence interval , sociology , biology , political science , ecology , law
Objective: To examine the differential in cancer survival between Indigenous and non‐Indigenous people in Queensland in relation to time after diagnosis, remoteness and area‐socioeconomic disadvantage. Design, setting and participants: Descriptive study of population‐based data on all 150 059 Queensland residents of known Indigenous status aged 15 years and over who were diagnosed with a primary invasive cancer during 1997–2006. Main outcome measures: Hazard ratios for the categories of area‐socioeconomic disadvantage, remoteness and Indigenous status, as well as conditional 5‐year survival estimates. Results: Five‐year survival was lower for Indigenous people diagnosed with cancer (50.3%; 95% CI, 47.8%–52.8%) compared with non‐Indigenous people (61.9%; 95% CI, 61.7%–62.2%). There was no evidence that this differential varied by remoteness ( P = 0.780) or area‐socioeconomic disadvantage ( P = 0.845). However, it did vary by time after diagnosis. In a time‐varying survival model stratified by age, sex and cancer type, the 50% excess mortality in the first year (adjusted HR, 1.50; 95% CI, 1.38–1.63) reduced to near unity at 2 years after diagnosis (HR, 1.03; 95% CI, 0.78–1.35). Conclusions: After a wide disparity in cancer survival in the first 2 years after diagnosis, Indigenous patients with cancer who survive these 2 years have a similar outlook to non‐Indigenous patients. Access to services and socioeconomic factors are unlikely to be the main causes of the early lower Indigenous survival, as patterns were similar across remoteness and area‐socioeconomic disadvantage. There is an urgent need to identify the factors leading to poor outcomes early after diagnosis among Indigenous people with cancer.