Adolescent Cancer Patient Referral in BC: Driving Time to Centre

Authors

  • Avril Li UBC School of Population and Public Health

Abstract

Recent studies have suggested that adolescent cancer may have better survival outcomes when treated at pediatric centres where they have greater emphasis on enrollment in clinical trials and more capacity to support the social and emotional needs of adolescents. This study investigated 616 cancer cases of those aged 15-18 from 1995 to 2010 in British Columbia, Canada with the data from the Childhood, Adolescent, and Young Adult Cancer Survivors Research (CAYACS) Program by the BC Cancer Research Agency (BCCA). Between 1995 and 2010, only 27% of adolescents in BC were referred to the BC Children’s Hospital (BCCH), the only pediatric oncology centre in BC. This study examined whether referrals to BCCH or BCCA were influenced by age, socioeconomic status, rurality, seasonality, radiotherapy treatment, and different diagnosis based on the International Classification of Childhood Cancer (ICCC) classification. Odds ratios of each modifier to BCCA or BCCH were calculated using univariate and multivariate logistics regression models in R Studio 3.5.1. Overall, 80% of younger adolescent (age 15-16) were referred to BCCH and only 14% of older adolescents (age 17-18) were referred to BCCH, which suggested that older adolescents were less likely than younger adolescents to be referred to BCCH (P value <2e-16). Additionally, leukemia and Central Nervous System cancer (CNS) patients were more likely than all other patients to be referred to BCCH (P value 0.0014). Conversely, patients with germ cell and thyroid carcinomas were less likely than all other patients to be referred to BCCH (P value 0.0029; P value 0.0348). Moreover, driving time to the closest centre for each patient was calculated on ESRI ArcGIS 10.6.1 based on the six-digits postal codes of each patient provided by CAYACS. As driving time increases, patients were less likely to be referred to their closest cancer treatment center.

Published

2021-01-19

Issue

Section

Articles