Understanding symptom contribution to sex inequality in bladder and renal cancer stage at diagnosis

Author:

Zhou Yin1ORCID,Lyratzopoulos Georgios2,Rajan Prabhakar34ORCID,Walter Fiona M.1,Wu Jianhua1

Affiliation:

1. Wolfson Institute of Population Health Queen Mary University of London London UK

2. Institute of Epidemiology and Health Care University College London London UK

3. Barts Cancer Institute, Cancer Research UK City of London Centre Queen Mary University of London London UK

4. Department of Urology, Barts Health NHS Trust The Royal London Hospital London UK

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundUnderstanding sex‐specific factors contributing to advanced‐stage diagnosis can guide interventions to reduce sex inequality in patients with urological cancers.MethodWe used linked primary care and cancer registry data to examine associations between symptoms and advanced‐stage in 1151 bladder cancer and 440 renal cancer patients diagnosed between January 2012 and December 2015 in England. We performed logistic regression, adjusting for sex, age, deprivation and routes to diagnosis, including interaction terms between symptoms and sex and symptoms and age.ResultsFemale sex (OR vs. men 1.89 [1.28–2.79]; p = 0.001) and patients presenting with urinary tract infections (OR 2.22 [1.34–3.69]) and abdominal symptoms (OR 2.19 [1.30–3.70]) were associated with increased odds of advanced‐stage bladder cancer (vs. haematuria, p = 0.016 for both). Women with haematuria and men with abdominal symptoms (compared with the opposite sex with the same presenting symptom) were more likely to have advanced‐stage bladder cancer. Neither sex nor symptom associations were observed for renal cancer.ConclusionNon‐haematuria symptoms are associated with higher risk of advanced‐stage bladder cancer. Greater risk of advanced‐stage bladder cancer in women may reflect biological differences in haematuria onset and sex differences during diagnostic process. Identifying higher risk women with haematuria may reduce sex inequalities in bladder cancer outcomes.

Funder

NIHR School for Primary Care Research

Cancer Research UK

Barts Charity

Publisher

Wiley

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