1. Assessing a modified-AJCC TNM staging system in the New South Wales Cancer Registry, Australia.
- Author
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Lawrance, Sheena, Bui, Chau, Mahindra, Vidur, Arcorace, Maria, and Cooke-Yarborough, Claire
- Subjects
BREAST tumors ,COLON tumors ,COMPARATIVE studies ,LUNG tumors ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL societies ,MELANOMA ,PROSTATE tumors ,RECTUM tumors ,RESEARCH ,SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) ,TUMOR classification ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,EVALUATION research ,ACQUISITION of data - Abstract
Background: In 2017, the New South Wales Cancer Registry (NSWCR) participated in a project, supported by Cancer Australia, aiming to provide national stage data for melanoma, prostate, colorectal, breast, and lung cancers diagnosed in 2011. Simplified business rules based on the American Joint Committee for Cancer (AJCC) Tumour-Node-Metastasis (TNM) stage were applied to obtain Registry-Derived (RD) stage, defined as the best estimate of TNM stage at diagnosis using routine notifications available within cancer registries. RD-stage was compared with Degree of Spread (DoS), which has been recorded for all applicable cancers in NSWCR at a population-based level since 1972, and a summary AJCC-TNM stage group, which has been collected variably since 2006. For each of the five high incidence cancers, we compared the level of improvements RD-staging provided in terms of completeness and accuracy (alignment to more clinically relevant AJCC-TNM) over DoS.Methods: For each of the five cancers, stage data were extracted from NSWCR pre- and post- RD-staging to compare data completeness across all three staging systems. The alignment between DoS/RD-stage and AJCC-TNM was compared, as were the expected and observed cross-tabulated frequency distributions using a subset of NSWCR data. To determine differences between use of DoS, RD-stage, and AJCC-TNM in an epidemiological analysis, we compared survival models developed from each of the three stage variables.Results: We found RD-staging provided greatest stage data completeness and alignment to AJCC-TNM for prostate cancers, followed by breast, then melanoma and lung cancers. For colorectal cancer, summary stage from DoS was confirmed as an equivalent surrogate staging system to both AJCC-TNM and RD-stage.Conclusions: This analysis provides an evidence-based approach that can be used to inform decision-making for resource planning and potential implementation of a new stage data field in population-based cancer registries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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