The Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus, OH
Hayley Marie Dunlop , Robert Connor Chick , Carson Karakis , Sabrina Catalano , Samilia Obeng-Gyasi , Carlo M. Contreras , Susan Tsai , Timothy M. Pawlik , Joal D. Beane
Background: Based on guidelines from the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN), sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) should be offered to patients with high-risk stage IB or stage II melanoma and adjuvant systemic therapy is recommended for patients with stage III disease. Persistent poverty census tracts are defined as areas where at least20% of residents were poor as measured by each of the 1980, 1990, 2000 censuses and 2007 American Community Survey 5-year average. The aim of this study was to describe the association between persistent poverty and adherence to NCCN guidelines and cancer-specific survival in patients with cutaneous melanoma. Methods: Patients diagnosed with melanoma from 2006-2018 were identified in Survival, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program registries. The analytic cohort was restricted to patients with superficial spreading melanoma, nodular melanoma, malignant melanoma with regression, lentigo malignant melanoma, and acral lentiginous melanoma. Patient demographics such as age, race, and ethnicity and tumor characteristics associated with stage at diagnosis were analyzed using adjusted regression analyses for patients of all melanoma stages. Demographics and tumor characteristics associated with receipt of SLNB were analyzed amongst pathologic stage IB and II cases, and demographics and tumor characteristics associated with receipt of adjuvant systemic therapy were analyzed amongst stage III cases. Kaplan-Meier curves and adjusted accelerated failure time models were used to examine disparities in cancer-specific survival. Results: Of 127,308 total patients, 3.13% (n=3994) lived in census tracts with persistent poverty. In adjusted analyses, persistent poverty was an independent predictor of later pathologic stage at diagnosis (OR 1.32 [95% CI 1.21-1.44] p<0.001). Persistent poverty was also associated with lower likelihood of receiving SLNB according to NCCN guidelines (OR 0.717 [SE 0.072] p<0.01) and with worse cancer-specific survival (HR 1.25 [1.06-1.47], p=0.008) when controlling for age, race, ethnicity, pathologic stage at diagnosis, and histology. In univariable models persistent poverty was associated with increased odds of receiving systemic therapy, but this relationship was not significant on multivariable analysis. Conclusions: Patients from areas with persistent poverty had a later pathologic stage at diagnosis, were less likely to receive a SLNB according to NCCN guidelines, and had worse cancer-specific survival. Efforts to better define and resolve disparities in the treatment and survival of patients with melanoma are warranted.
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