Unveiling a Health Disparity: Comparative Analysis of Head and Neck Cancer Trends between First Nations People and Non-Indigenous Australians (1998–2015)

Background: We aim to assess and compare the HNC trends between the First Nations and non-Indigenous population. Methods: HNC incidence (1998–2013) and mortality (1998–2015) data in First Nations people and non-Indigenous Australians were utilised from the Australian Cancer Database. The age-standar...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lamia Fahad Khan, Santosh Tadakamadla, Jyothi Tadakamadla
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.26181/26868727.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Unveiling_a_Health_Disparity_Comparative_Analysis_of_Head_and_Neck_Cancer_Trends_between_First_Nations_People_and_Non-Indigenous_Australians_1998_2015_/26868727
id ftlatrobeunivfig:oai:figshare.com:article/26868727
record_format openpolar
spelling ftlatrobeunivfig:oai:figshare.com:article/26868727 2024-09-15T18:06:16+00:00 Unveiling a Health Disparity: Comparative Analysis of Head and Neck Cancer Trends between First Nations People and Non-Indigenous Australians (1998–2015) Lamia Fahad Khan Santosh Tadakamadla Jyothi Tadakamadla 2024-07-15T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.26181/26868727.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Unveiling_a_Health_Disparity_Comparative_Analysis_of_Head_and_Neck_Cancer_Trends_between_First_Nations_People_and_Non-Indigenous_Australians_1998_2015_/26868727 unknown doi:10.26181/26868727.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Unveiling_a_Health_Disparity_Comparative_Analysis_of_Head_and_Neck_Cancer_Trends_between_First_Nations_People_and_Non-Indigenous_Australians_1998_2015_/26868727 CC BY 4.0 Biomedical and clinical sciences Clinical sciences Oncology and carcinogenesis First Nations people head and neck cancer incidence mortality survival Text Journal contribution 2024 ftlatrobeunivfig https://doi.org/10.26181/26868727.v1 2024-09-01T23:35:50Z Background: We aim to assess and compare the HNC trends between the First Nations and non-Indigenous population. Methods: HNC incidence (1998–2013) and mortality (1998–2015) data in First Nations people and non-Indigenous Australians were utilised from the Australian Cancer Database. The age-standardised incidence and mortality trends along with annual percentage changes were analysed using Joinpoint models. Age-standardised incidence and mortality rates according to remoteness, states, and five-year survival rates among First Nations people and non-Indigenous Australians were presented as graphs. Results: First Nations people had over twice the age-standardised incidence (2013; 29.8/100,000 vs. 14.7/100,000) and over 3.5 times the age-standardised mortality rates (2015; 14.2/100,000 vs. 4.1/100,000) than their non-Indigenous counterparts. Both populations saw a decline in mortality, but the decline was only statistically significant in non-Indigenous Australians (17.1% decline, 1998: 4.8/100,000, 2015: 4.1/100,000; p < 0.05). Across all remoteness levels and states, First Nations people consistently had higher age-standardised incidence and mortality rates. Furthermore, the five-year survival rate was lower by 25% in First Nations people. Conclusion: First Nations people continue to shoulder a disproportionate HNC burden compared to non-Indigenous Australians. Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations La Trobe University (Melbourne): Figshare
institution Open Polar
collection La Trobe University (Melbourne): Figshare
op_collection_id ftlatrobeunivfig
language unknown
topic Biomedical and clinical sciences
Clinical sciences
Oncology and carcinogenesis
First Nations people
head and neck cancer
incidence
mortality
survival
spellingShingle Biomedical and clinical sciences
Clinical sciences
Oncology and carcinogenesis
First Nations people
head and neck cancer
incidence
mortality
survival
Lamia Fahad Khan
Santosh Tadakamadla
Jyothi Tadakamadla
Unveiling a Health Disparity: Comparative Analysis of Head and Neck Cancer Trends between First Nations People and Non-Indigenous Australians (1998–2015)
topic_facet Biomedical and clinical sciences
Clinical sciences
Oncology and carcinogenesis
First Nations people
head and neck cancer
incidence
mortality
survival
description Background: We aim to assess and compare the HNC trends between the First Nations and non-Indigenous population. Methods: HNC incidence (1998–2013) and mortality (1998–2015) data in First Nations people and non-Indigenous Australians were utilised from the Australian Cancer Database. The age-standardised incidence and mortality trends along with annual percentage changes were analysed using Joinpoint models. Age-standardised incidence and mortality rates according to remoteness, states, and five-year survival rates among First Nations people and non-Indigenous Australians were presented as graphs. Results: First Nations people had over twice the age-standardised incidence (2013; 29.8/100,000 vs. 14.7/100,000) and over 3.5 times the age-standardised mortality rates (2015; 14.2/100,000 vs. 4.1/100,000) than their non-Indigenous counterparts. Both populations saw a decline in mortality, but the decline was only statistically significant in non-Indigenous Australians (17.1% decline, 1998: 4.8/100,000, 2015: 4.1/100,000; p < 0.05). Across all remoteness levels and states, First Nations people consistently had higher age-standardised incidence and mortality rates. Furthermore, the five-year survival rate was lower by 25% in First Nations people. Conclusion: First Nations people continue to shoulder a disproportionate HNC burden compared to non-Indigenous Australians.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lamia Fahad Khan
Santosh Tadakamadla
Jyothi Tadakamadla
author_facet Lamia Fahad Khan
Santosh Tadakamadla
Jyothi Tadakamadla
author_sort Lamia Fahad Khan
title Unveiling a Health Disparity: Comparative Analysis of Head and Neck Cancer Trends between First Nations People and Non-Indigenous Australians (1998–2015)
title_short Unveiling a Health Disparity: Comparative Analysis of Head and Neck Cancer Trends between First Nations People and Non-Indigenous Australians (1998–2015)
title_full Unveiling a Health Disparity: Comparative Analysis of Head and Neck Cancer Trends between First Nations People and Non-Indigenous Australians (1998–2015)
title_fullStr Unveiling a Health Disparity: Comparative Analysis of Head and Neck Cancer Trends between First Nations People and Non-Indigenous Australians (1998–2015)
title_full_unstemmed Unveiling a Health Disparity: Comparative Analysis of Head and Neck Cancer Trends between First Nations People and Non-Indigenous Australians (1998–2015)
title_sort unveiling a health disparity: comparative analysis of head and neck cancer trends between first nations people and non-indigenous australians (1998–2015)
publishDate 2024
url https://doi.org/10.26181/26868727.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Unveiling_a_Health_Disparity_Comparative_Analysis_of_Head_and_Neck_Cancer_Trends_between_First_Nations_People_and_Non-Indigenous_Australians_1998_2015_/26868727
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation doi:10.26181/26868727.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Unveiling_a_Health_Disparity_Comparative_Analysis_of_Head_and_Neck_Cancer_Trends_between_First_Nations_People_and_Non-Indigenous_Australians_1998_2015_/26868727
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.26181/26868727.v1
_version_ 1810443746462924800