Psychological morbidity and quality of life of ethnic minority patients with cancer: a systematic review and meta-analysis

被引:146
|
作者
Luckett, Tim [1 ,2 ]
Goldstein, David [3 ,4 ]
Butow, Phyllis N. [1 ,5 ]
Gebski, Val [6 ]
Aldridge, Lynley J. [1 ]
McGrane, Joshua [1 ,7 ]
Ng, Weng [8 ]
King, Madeleine T. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Sydney, Psychooncol Cooperat Res Grp, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
[2] Univ New S Wales, Fac Med, SW Sydney Clin Sch, Sydney, NSW, Australia
[3] Prince Wales Hosp, Dept Med Oncol, Sydney, NSW, Australia
[4] Univ New S Wales, Prince Wales Hosp, Fac Med, Sch Clin, Sydney, NSW, Australia
[5] Univ Sydney, Ctr Med Psychol & Evidence Based Decis Making, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
[6] Univ Sydney, Natl Hlth & Med Res Council, Clin Trials Ctr, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
[7] Univ Western Australia, Grad Sch Educ, Perth, WA 6009, Australia
[8] Liverpool Canc Therapy Ctr, Dept Med Oncol, Sydney, NSW, Australia
来源
LANCET ONCOLOGY | 2011年 / 12卷 / 13期
关键词
STAGE BREAST-CANCER; FORM HEALTH SURVEY; PROSTATE-CANCER; MENTAL-HEALTH; FUNCTIONAL ASSESSMENT; HISPANIC ETHNICITY; MULTIETHNIC SAMPLE; AFRICAN-AMERICAN; SOCIAL SUPPORT; SURVIVORS;
D O I
10.1016/S1470-2045(11)70212-1
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Background 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. Methods 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. Findings 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. Interpretation 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.
引用
收藏
页码:1240 / 1248
页数:9
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