Abstract

BackgroundAlthough acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) 5 years survival in minors has reached 90%, socioeconomic differences have been reported among and within countries. Within countries, the difference has been related to the socioeconomic status of the parents, even in the context of public health services with universal coverage. In Mexico, differences in the mortality of children with cancer have been reported among sociodemographic zones. The Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social (IMSS), the country’s main social security institution, has reported socioeconomic differences in life expectancy within its affiliated population. Here, the socioeconomic inequalities in the survival of children (< 15 years old) enrolled in the IMSS were analyzed.MethodsFive-year survival data were analyzed in cohorts of patients diagnosed with ALL during the period 2007–2009 in the two IMSS networks of medical services that serve 7 states of the central region of Mexico. A Cox proportional risk model was developed and adjusted for the socioeconomic characteristics of family, community of residence and for the clinical characteristics of the children. The slope of socioeconomic inequality of the probability of dying within five years after the diagnosis of ALL was estimated.ResultsFor the 294 patients studied, the 5 years survival rate was 53.7%; the median survival was 4.06 years (4.9 years for standard-risk diagnosis; 2.5 years for high-risk diagnosis). The attrition rate was 12%. The Cox model showed that children who had been IMSS-insured for less than half their lives had more than double the risk of dying than those who had been insured for their entire lives.ConclusionsWe did not find evidence of socioeconomic inequalities in the survival of children with ALL associated with family income, educational and occupational level of parents. However, we found a relevant gradient related social security protection: the longer children’s life insured by social security, the higher their probability of surviving ALL was. These results add evidence of the effectiveness of social security, as a mechanism of wealth redistribution and a promoter of social mobility. Extending these social security benefits to the entire Mexican population could promote better health outcomes.

Highlights

  • Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) 5 years survival in minors has reached 90%, socioeconomic differences have been reported among and within countries

  • Cancer is a major cause of death in children worldwide and the overall age-standardized incidence rate (ASR) in children (< 15 years old) is 140·6 per million person-years, and the most common cancers is leukaemia (46·4 per million) [1]

  • An analysis of five-year survival post-diagnosis was carried out to analyze socioeconomic inequalities for cohorts of minors (< 15 years old) with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) diagnosed in 2007–2009 in two tertiary hospitals of the Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social (IMSS) (La Raza and SXXI, serving the 7 states of the central region of Mexico); this analysis was performed by means of a Cox proportional risk model [22], adjusted for clinical predictors of survival

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Summary

Introduction

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) 5 years survival in minors has reached 90%, socioeconomic differences have been reported among and within countries. The difference has been related to the socioeconomic status of the parents, even in the context of public health services with universal coverage. In Mexico, differences in the mortality of children with cancer have been reported among sociodemographic zones. In a study of almost six million children in South Korea, Son et al [8] reported that among children with cancer, the risk of dying among children whose parents were unemployed was 73% higher than that among those whose parents performed non-manual labor and 26% higher than that among those whose parents were manual laborers, whereas the risk of dying was 37.6% lower among children whose mothers had a university education than among those whose mothers had not finished high school. In the United Kingdom, Lightfoot et al [9] analyzed the inequalities in the survival of children with ALL according to the degree of marginalization of their place of residence, finding that children living in zones with higher marginalization had a 29% greater risk of death than did those living in less marginalized areas and that the risk was 12% higher in children of parents in occupations requiring lower qualifications than in children of parents in professional occupations

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