Psycho-oncology Co-operative Research Group, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Lancet Oncol. 2011 Dec;12(13):1240-8. doi: 10.1016/S1470-2045(11)70212-1. Epub 2011 Oct 11.
Ethnic minority is associated with higher cancer incidence and poorer survival than is being in the majority group. We did a systematic review and meta-analysis to assess whether psychological morbidity and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) were affected by minority status.
We searched Medline, AMED, PsycINFO, Embase, CENTRAL, CINAHL, PubMed, Sociological Abstracts, and Web of Science for English-language articles published between Jan 1, 1995, and October, 2009. Articles were eligible if they reported original data on anxiety, depression, distress (for psychological morbidity), or HRQoL in minority and majority cancer patients or survivors. Minority status was defined as being an immigrant or having an ethnic, linguistic, or religious background different to the majority of the population in the country where the research was done. We excluded African Americans and indigenous groups. Eligible articles were rated for quality of reporting, external validity, internal validity, sample size, and power. Each quality criterion was rated independently by two reviewers until inter-rater reliability was achieved. In a meta-analysis we compared mean scores adjusted for socioeconomic status and other sociodemographic and clinical variables, where available. Effect sizes greater than 0·5 and 95% CI that included 0·5 or -0·5 were deemed clinically important, with negative values indicating worse outcomes in minority patients. We assessed publication bias by estimating the number of potential unpublished studies and the number of non-signficant studies with p=0·05 required to produce a non-significant overall result.
We identified 21 eligible articles that included 18 datasets collected in the USA and one in each of Canada, Romania, and the UK. Ethnic minority groups were Hispanic, Asian or Pacific Islander, or Hungarian (one dataset). Overall, we found minority versus majority groups to have significantly worse distress (mean difference -0·37, 95% CI -0·46 to -0·28; p<0·0001), depression (-0·23, -0·36 to -0·11; p=0·0003), and overall HRQoL (-0·33, -0·58 to -0·07; p=0·013). Further analyses found disparities to be specific to Hispanic patients in the USA, in whom poorer outcomes were consistent with potentially clinically important differences for distress (effect size -0·37, 95% CI -0·54 to -0·20; p<0·0001), social HRQoL (-0·45, -0·87 to -0·03; p=0·035), and overall HRQoL (-0·49, -0·78 to -0.20; p=0·0008). Results were significantly heterogeneous for overall HRQoL and all domains. Tests for interaction, for adjusted versus unadjusted and comparisons of high-quality, medium-quality, and low-quality articles, were generally non-significant, which suggests no bias. We found no evidence of any substantive publication bias.
Hispanic cancer patients in the USA, but not other ethnic minority groups, report significantly worse distress, depression, social HRQoL, and overall HRQoL than do majority patients, of which all but depression might be clinically important. Heterogeneous results might, however, have limited the interpretation. Data for other minority groups and for anxiety are scarce. More studies are needed from outside the USA. Future reports should more clearly describe their minority group samples and analyses should control for clinical and sociodemographic variables known to predict outcomes. Understanding of why outcomes are poor in US Hispanic patients is needed to inform the targeting of interventions.
Prince of Wales Hospital, Sydney, Australia.
少数民族的癌症发病率和存活率均高于多数群体。我们进行了一项系统综述和荟萃分析,以评估心理痛苦和健康相关生活质量(HRQoL)是否受到少数群体身份的影响。
我们检索了 Medline、AMED、PsycINFO、Embase、CENTRAL、CINAHL、PubMed、Sociological Abstracts 和 Web of Science,查找 1995 年 1 月 1 日至 2009 年 10 月发表的英文文章。如果文章报告了焦虑、抑郁、困扰(用于心理痛苦)或少数群体和多数癌症患者或幸存者的 HRQoL 的原始数据,则符合入选标准。少数群体身份的定义是移民或与研究所在国家的多数人口在种族、语言或宗教背景方面不同。我们排除了非裔美国人和土著群体。对符合条件的文章进行了报告质量、外部有效性、内部有效性、样本量和功效的评价。两名评审员独立对每个质量标准进行评分,直到达到组内评分者间的一致性。在荟萃分析中,我们比较了在调整社会经济状况和其他社会人口学及临床变量后(如有)的平均得分。大于 0·5 和包含 0·5 或 -0·5 的 95%置信区间(CI)的效应大小被认为具有临床意义,负值表示少数群体患者的结局更差。我们通过估计需要多少潜在未发表的研究和 p=0·05 的非显著性研究数量来评估发表偏倚,以产生非显著性的总体结果。
我们确定了 21 篇符合条件的文章,其中 18 篇数据集来自美国,1 篇分别来自加拿大、罗马尼亚和英国。少数民族群体包括西班牙裔、亚裔或太平洋岛民或匈牙利裔(一组数据)。总的来说,我们发现少数群体与多数群体相比,焦虑(平均差值 -0·37,95%CI -0·46 至 -0·28;p<0·0001)、抑郁(-0·23,-0·36 至 -0·11;p=0·0003)和总体 HRQoL(-0·33,-0·58 至 -0·07;p=0·013)的情况更差。进一步的分析发现,这种差异在美国的西班牙裔患者中是特定的,其较差的结果与潜在的临床重要差异一致,即焦虑(效应大小 -0·37,95%CI -0·54 至 -0·20;p<0·0001)、社会 HRQoL(-0·45,-0·87 至 -0·03;p=0·035)和总体 HRQoL(-0·49,-0·78 至 -0·20;p=0·0008)。总体 HRQoL 和所有领域的结果均存在显著的异质性。对于调整和未调整的结果、高质量、中等质量和低质量文章的比较,交互检验通常不显著,这表明不存在偏倚。我们没有发现任何实质性的发表偏倚的证据。
在美国,西班牙裔癌症患者报告的焦虑、抑郁、社会 HRQoL 和总体 HRQoL 明显比多数患者差,除了抑郁之外,所有这些差异可能都具有临床意义。然而,异质性的结果可能限制了对结果的解释。关于其他少数民族群体和焦虑的资料很少。需要来自美国以外的更多研究。未来的报告应更清楚地描述他们的少数群体样本,分析应控制已知可预测结局的临床和社会人口学变量。需要了解为什么美国西班牙裔患者的结局较差,以便为干预措施提供依据。
澳大利亚悉尼王子医院。