Even with access to a clinical trial, cancer patients living in the poorest neighborhoods in America have a nearly 30% greater chance of dying from their disease compared to the wealthiest patients, SWOG Cancer Research Network study results show.
Published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, the findings illustrate the stubbornly harmful effects of poverty on health and life expectancy, says study lead Joseph Unger, PhD, a SWOG health services researcher and biostatistician based at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.
“Joining a clinical trial guarantees uniform, high-quality care, which should help improve outcomes for people with cancer,” Unger said. “What’s surprising, and dismaying, to learn is that even though all patients benefit from trials, the poorest patients are still much more likely to die of their cancer. The disparity persists.”
At SWOG, a cancer clinical trials group funded by the National Cancer Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health, Unger is building a high-profile body of work that investigates the causes and effects of health disparities in cancer patients. In 2018, he published results of a study that showed that differences in survival rates between rural and urban cancer patients are significantly reduced when patients are enrolled in a clinical trial. With this new work, Unger wanted to examine—for the first time—the association between socioeconomic deprivation and outcomes among cancer trial patients.
To examine the link, Unger and his team analyzed data from 41,109 patients enrolled in 55 Phase III and large Phase II studies conducted by SWOG between 1985 and 2012. Patients in the trials were diagnosed with every major cancer type and in various stages of cancer progression.
The team used patients’ ZIP codes and linked them to the Area Deprivation Index, a measure of the socioeconomic ranking of U.S. neighborhoods. The team categorized patients into five categories ranging from “most deprived” to “most affluent.” The team also examined patient outcomes in terms of overall survival and progression-free survival. Finally, the team examined cancer-specific survival, or whether and when trial patients died specifically from their disease.
The results: The poorest patients live the shortest lives. Compared to trial patients in the most affluent neighborhoods, these patients had a 28% increased risk of death. The same pattern was found for progression-free and cancer-specific survival. Patients from the poorest areas always fared the worst—even after accounting for possible demographic, clinical, and geographic variables that could influence their health and longevity.
The factors driving the disparities are many, Unger said, ranging from a lack of access to good medical care and the money to pay for it to an increased risk for smoking, obesity, and other factors that can lead to bad health. His results suggest that the kind of guideline-based cancer care patients receive in a clinical trial may eliminate about half of the negative effects of poverty.
Edited by Gary Cramer