Mammogram Uptake from Social Determinants of Health Can Be Lost in Translation to Individual Patients

Author:

Davis Matthew1,Simpson Kit1,Diaz Vanessa1,Alekseyenko Alexander V.1

Affiliation:

1. Medical University of South Carolina

Abstract

Abstract Purpose The objective of this study is to describe patterns in barriers to breast cancer screening uptake with the end goal of improving screening adherence and decreasing the burden of mortality due to breast cancer. This study looks at social determinants of health and their association to screening and mortality. It also investigates the extent that models trained on county data are generalizable to individuals. Methods County level screening uptake and age adjusted mortality due to breast cancer are combined with the Centers for Disease Controls Social Vulnerability Index (SVI) to train a model predicting screening uptake rates. Patterns learned are then applied to de-identified electronic medical records from individual patients to make predictions on mammogram screening follow through. Results Accurate predictions can be made about a county’s breast cancer screening uptake with the SVI. However, the association between increased screening, and decreased age adjusted mortality, doesn’t hold in areas with a high proportion of minority residents. It is also shown that patterns learned from county SVI data have little discriminative power at the patient level. Conclusion This study demonstrates that social determinants in the SVI can explain much of the variance in county breast cancer screening rates. However, these same patterns fail to discriminate which patients will have timely follow through of a mammogram screening test. This study also concludes that the core association between increased screening and decreased age adjusted mortality does not hold in high proportion minority areas.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference13 articles.

1. CDCBreastCancer. An Update on Cancer Deaths in the United States. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Published February 28, 2022. Accessed April 28, 2022. https://www.cdc.gov/cancer/dcpc/research/update-on-cancer-deaths/index.htm

2. Social Determinants of Black-White Disparities in Breast Cancer Mortality: A Review;Gerend MA;Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev,2008

3. County-Level Factors Predicting Low Uptake of Screening Mammography;Heller SL;AJR Am J Roentgenol,2018

4. CDC SVI Documentation 2018 | Place and Health | ATSDR. Published February 10, 2022. Accessed December 17, 2022. https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/placeandhealth/svi/documentation/SVI_documentation_2018.html

5. Bronner K, Eliassen MS, King A, Leggett C, Punjasthitkul S, Skinner J. The Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care: 2018 Data Update.:20.

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