The goals of the study were to provide a visualization of geographical distribution of cervical cancer in the US, and to quantify associations between early or advanced cancers with screening rates, poverty level, race/ethnicity, and access to brachytherapy.
The administrative claims database queried for the study included information on 75,521 women (median age 53) with a first diagnosis of cervical cancer from 2015 through 2022, and 14,033 women with recurrent or metastatic malignancies (median age 59 years).
Distribution of cases was higher in the South compared with in other US regions (37% vs approximately 20% for other regions).
Looking at the association between screening rates and disease burden from 2017 through 2022, the Geo-Analyzer showed that higher screening rates were significantly associated with decreased burden of new cases only in the South, whereas higher screening rates were associated with lower recurrent/metastatic disease burden in the Midwest and South, but a higher disease burden in the West.
In all regions, there was a significant association between decreased early cancer burden in areas with high percentages of women of Asian heritage, and significantly increased burden in areas with large populations of women of Hispanic origin.
The only significant association of race/ethnicity with recurrent/metastatic burden was a decrease in the Midwest in populations with large Asian populations.
An analysis of the how poverty levels affected screening and disease burden showed that in areas with a high percentage of low-income households there were significant associations with decreased cervical cancer screening and higher burden of newly diagnosed cases.
Poverty levels were significantly associated with recurrent/metastatic cancers only in the South.
The investigators also found that the presence of one or more brachytherapy centers within a ZIP-3 region (that is, a large geographic area designated by the first 3 digits of ZIP codes rather than 5-digit city codes) was associated with a 2.7% reduction in recurrent or metastatic cervical cancer burden (P less than .001).
Demographic Marker?
Reasons for disparities are complex and may involve a combination of inadequate health literacy and social and economic circumstances, said Cesar Castro, MD, commenting on the new cervical cancer study.
He noted in an interview that “the concept that a single Pap smear is often insufficient to capture precancerous changes, and hence the need for serial testing every 3 years, can be lost on individuals who also have competing challenges securing paychecks and/or dependent care. Historical barriers such as perceptions of the underlying cause of cervical cancer, the HPV virus, being a sexually transmitted disease and hence a taboo subject, also underpin decision-making. These sentiments have also fueled resistance towards HPV vaccination in young girls and boys.”
Dr. Castro, who is Program Director for Gynecologic Oncology at the Mass General Cancer Center in Boston, pointed out that treatments for cervical cancer often involve surgery or a combination of chemotherapy and radiation, and that side effects from these interventions may be especially disruptive to the lives of women who are breadwinners or caregivers for their families.
“These are the shackles that poverty places on many Black and Hispanic women notably in under-resourced regions domestically and globally,” he said.
The study was supported by Seagen and Genmab. Dr. Castellano disclosed consulting fees from GSK and Nykode and grant support from BMS. Dr. Castro reported no relevant conflicts of interest and was not involved in either of the studies presented at the meeting.