Clinical Research Papers:
Marital status independently predicts gastric cancer survival after surgical resection--an analysis of the SEER database
Metrics: PDF 1657 views | HTML 2134 views | ?
Abstract
Rong-liang Shi1,2,3,*, Qian Chen1,*, Zhen Yang1, Gaofeng Pan1, Ziping Zhang1, WeiHua Wang1,4, Shaoqun Liu1, Dongbin Zhang1, Daowen Jiang1,4 and Weiyan Liu1
1 Department of General Surgery, Minhang Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai, People’s Republic of China
2 Department of Head and Neck Surgery, Fudan University Shanghai Cancer Center, Shanghai, People’s Republic of China
3 Department of Oncology, Shanghai Medical College, Fudan University, Shanghai, People’s Republic of China
4 Department of Thoracic Surgery, Minhang Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai, People’s Republic of China
* These authors have contributed equally to this work
Correspondence to:
Weiyan Liu, email:
Daowen Jiang, email:
Keywords: gastric cancer, marital status, SEER,survival analysis
Received: October 20, 2015 Accepted: January 24, 2016 Published: January 31, 2016
Abstract
Marital status was found to be an independent prognostic factor for survival in various cancer types, but it hasn’t been studied in gastric cancer. The Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results database was used to compare survival outcomes with marital status. A total of 16,106 eligible patients were identified. Patients in the widowed group had the highest proportion of women, more common site of stomach, more prevalence of elderly patients, higher percentage of adenocarcinoma, and more tumors at localized stage (P < 0.05). Patients in married group had better 5year cause-specific survival (CSS) than those unmarried (P < 0.05). Further analysis showed that widowed patients always presented the lowest CSS compared with that of other groups. Widowed patients had 7.1% reduction in 5-year CSS compared with married patients at Localized stage (77.2% vs 70.1%, P < 0.001), 9.6% reduction at Regional stage (38.2% vs 28.6%, P < 0.001), and 4.7% reduction at Distant stage (13.3% vs 8.6%, P < 0.001). These results showed that unmarried patients were at greater risk of cancer specific mortality. Despite favorable clinicpathological characteristics, widowed patients were at highest risk of death compared with other groups.
All site content, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
PII: 7107