Title of article
Smoking and Histological Factors Influencing Long-term Survival of Gastric Carcinoma in Consecutive Patient Series
Author/Authors
Delpisheh، Ali نويسنده Department of Clinical Epidemiology, Ilam University of Medical Sciences, Ilam, Iran Delpisheh, Ali , Veisani، Yousef نويسنده Department of Clinical Epidemiology, Student Research Committee, Ilam University of Medical Sciences, Ilam, Iran Veisani, Yousef , Sayehmiri، Kourosh نويسنده Department of Social Medicine, Prevention of Psychosocial Injuries Research Centre, Ilam University of Medical Sciences, Ilam, Iran Sayehmiri, Kourosh , Rahimi، Ezzatollah نويسنده Liver & Digestive Research Center, Kurdistan University of Medical Sciences, Sanandaj, ,
Issue Information
فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی 19 سال 2014
Pages
7
From page
129
To page
135
Abstract
Background: There is little information about the possible influence of lifestyle
and etiologic risk factors on survival amongst patients with gastric cancer.
Methods: We recruited a consecutive series of 249 patients with definite diagnosis
of gastric cancer who had been hospitalized in Towhid Hospital, Sanandaj, Kurdistan
Province in Western Iran during a five-year period from 2006 until 2011. Survival rate
was calculated according to the Kaplan-Meier and log rank statistical methods. Cox
hazard regression was used to investigate the effect of the variables and adjust for the
effect of age.
Results: According to univariate analysis, related variables that included age,
gender, Residence, histology grade, histology type, familial history of gastrointestinal
cancer and mental illness during the disease had no significant effects on survival rate
variation. Significant independent factors on survival included past medical history of
gastrointestinal diseases (P-value = 0.010), tobacco smoking (P-value = 0.012), and
early diagnosis (P-value = 0.008). Cox-regression analysis of demographic, lifestyle
and histological factors with > 45 years of age as the reference revealed that patients
46-65 years of age at diagnosis (HR=0.602; 95% CI=0.250-1.44; P=0.256) and those
> 66 years of age (HR=1.07, 95% CI=0.46-2.50, P?0.001) had an increased risk for
disease progression and death.
Conclusions: Past medical history of gastrointestinal diseases, tobacco smoking and
early stage diagnosis might influence the long-term survival of patients with gastric
cancer.
Journal title
Middle East Journal of Cancer (MEJC)
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Middle East Journal of Cancer (MEJC)
Record number
1364926
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