Influence of deprivation and rurality on patient-reported outcomes of men living with and beyond prostate cancer diagnosis in the UK: A population-based study
Influence of deprivation and rurality on patient-reported outcomes of men living with and beyond prostate cancer diagnosis in the UK: A population-based study
Background: In the UK, inequalities exist in prostate cancer incidence, survival and treatment by area deprivation and rurality. This work aimed to identify variation in patient-reported outcomes of men with prostate cancer by area type. Methods: A population-based survey of men 18–42 months after prostate cancer diagnosis (N = 35608) measured self-assessed health (SAH) using the EQ-5D and five functional domains using the Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite (EPIC-26). Results: Mean SAH was higher for men in least deprived areas compared to most deprived (difference 6.3 (95 %CI 5.6–7.2)). SAH scores were lower for men in most urban areas compared to most rural (difference 2.4 (95 %CI 1.8–3.0)). Equivalent estimates in the general population reported a 13 point difference by deprivation and a 4 point difference by rurality. For each EPIC-26 domain, functional outcomes were better for men in the least deprived areas, with clinically meaningful differences observed for urinary incontinence and hormonal function. There were no clinically meaningful differences in EPIC-26 outcomes by rurality with less than a three point difference in scores for each domain between urban and rural areas. Conclusion: In men 18–42 months post diagnosis of prostate cancer in the UK, impacts of area deprivation and rurality on self-assessed health related quality of life were not greater than would be expected in the general population. However, clinically meaningful differences were identified for some prostate functional outcomes (urinary and hormonal function) by deprivation. No impact by rurality of residence was identified.
Deprivation, Functional outcomes, Health-related quality of life, Inequalities, Prostate cancer, Rurality
Smith, Lesley
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Downing, Amy
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Norman, Paul
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Wright, Penny
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Hounsome, Luke
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Watson, Eila
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Wagland, Richard
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Selby, Peter
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Kind, Paul
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Donnelly, David W.
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Butcher, Hugh
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Huws, Dyfed
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Mcnair, Emma
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Gavin, Anna
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Glaser, Adam W.
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December 2020
Smith, Lesley
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Downing, Amy
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Norman, Paul
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Wright, Penny
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Hounsome, Luke
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Watson, Eila
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Wagland, Richard
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Selby, Peter
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Kind, Paul
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Donnelly, David W.
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Butcher, Hugh
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Huws, Dyfed
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Mcnair, Emma
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Gavin, Anna
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Glaser, Adam W.
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Smith, Lesley, Downing, Amy, Norman, Paul, Wright, Penny, Hounsome, Luke, Watson, Eila, Wagland, Richard, Selby, Peter, Kind, Paul, Donnelly, David W., Butcher, Hugh, Huws, Dyfed, Mcnair, Emma, Gavin, Anna and Glaser, Adam W.
(2020)
Influence of deprivation and rurality on patient-reported outcomes of men living with and beyond prostate cancer diagnosis in the UK: A population-based study.
Cancer Epidemiology, 69, [101830].
(doi:10.1016/j.canep.2020.101830).
Abstract
Background: In the UK, inequalities exist in prostate cancer incidence, survival and treatment by area deprivation and rurality. This work aimed to identify variation in patient-reported outcomes of men with prostate cancer by area type. Methods: A population-based survey of men 18–42 months after prostate cancer diagnosis (N = 35608) measured self-assessed health (SAH) using the EQ-5D and five functional domains using the Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite (EPIC-26). Results: Mean SAH was higher for men in least deprived areas compared to most deprived (difference 6.3 (95 %CI 5.6–7.2)). SAH scores were lower for men in most urban areas compared to most rural (difference 2.4 (95 %CI 1.8–3.0)). Equivalent estimates in the general population reported a 13 point difference by deprivation and a 4 point difference by rurality. For each EPIC-26 domain, functional outcomes were better for men in the least deprived areas, with clinically meaningful differences observed for urinary incontinence and hormonal function. There were no clinically meaningful differences in EPIC-26 outcomes by rurality with less than a three point difference in scores for each domain between urban and rural areas. Conclusion: In men 18–42 months post diagnosis of prostate cancer in the UK, impacts of area deprivation and rurality on self-assessed health related quality of life were not greater than would be expected in the general population. However, clinically meaningful differences were identified for some prostate functional outcomes (urinary and hormonal function) by deprivation. No impact by rurality of residence was identified.
Text
Influence of deprivation and rurality on patient-reported outcomes of men living with and beyond prostate cancer diagnosis in the UK: a population-based study
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 19 September 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 28 September 2020
Published date: December 2020
Keywords:
Deprivation, Functional outcomes, Health-related quality of life, Inequalities, Prostate cancer, Rurality
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 444534
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/444534
ISSN: 1877-7821
PURE UUID: 73931252-3955-40c1-939e-7777ea7c42ab
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Date deposited: 23 Oct 2020 16:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 05:58
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Contributors
Author:
Lesley Smith
Author:
Amy Downing
Author:
Paul Norman
Author:
Penny Wright
Author:
Luke Hounsome
Author:
Eila Watson
Author:
Peter Selby
Author:
Paul Kind
Author:
David W. Donnelly
Author:
Hugh Butcher
Author:
Dyfed Huws
Author:
Emma Mcnair
Author:
Anna Gavin
Author:
Adam W. Glaser
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