Abstract

BackgroundThe advancements in cancer therapy have improved the clinical outcomes of cancer patients in recent decades. However, advanced cancer therapy is expensive and requires good health care systems. For kidney cancer, no studies have yet established an association between clinical outcome and health care disparities.MethodsWe used the mortality-to-incidence ratio (MIR) for kidney cancer as a marker of clinical outcome to compare World Health Organization (WHO) country rankings and total expenditures on health/gross domestic product (e/GDP) using linear regression analyses.ResultsWe included 57 countries based on data from the GLOBOCAN 2012 database. We found that more highly developed regions have higher crude and age-standardized rates of kidney cancer incidence and mortality, but a lower MIR, when compared to less developed regions. North America has the highest crude rates of incidence, but the lowest MIRs, whereas Africa has the highest MIRs. Furthermore, favorable MIRs are correlated with countries with good WHO rankings and high e/GDP expenditures (p < 0.001 and p = 0.013, respectively).ConclusionsKidney cancer MIRs are positively associated with the ranking of health care systems and health care expenditures.

Highlights

  • The advancements in cancer therapy have improved the clinical outcomes of cancer patients in recent decades

  • The analysis based on World Health Organization (WHO) regions and continents indicated that the WHO European region had the highest crude rate of incidence and mortality (13.5 and 5.9, respectively), followed by the WHO Americas region

  • The kidney cancer mortality-to-incidence ratios are high in less developed regions We investigated the MIRs to determine any association between this ratio and the outcomes of kidney cancer patients

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Summary

Introduction

The advancements in cancer therapy have improved the clinical outcomes of cancer patients in recent decades. No studies have yet established an association between clinical outcome and health care disparities. In 2012, the worldwide estimates for kidney cancer were 338,000 new cases (incidence: 2.4%) and 143,000 deaths (mortality: 1.7%) [3]. The clinical outcomes of cancer treatment can be measured by the five-year survival rate, as well as partially by the mortality-to-incidence ratio (MIR) [6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. The five-year relative survival rate for kidney cancer patients in the US in 2005–2011 was approximately 74%, an increase from the rate of approximately 57% in the 1980s

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