Socio-Environmental Patterns Associated with Cancer Mortality: A Study Based on a Quality of Life Approach

Pou SA; Diaz MP; Velazquez GA

Keywords: argentina, epidemiology, quality of life, neoplasms, spatial analysis

Abstract

BACKGROUND: With 18.6% of total deaths due to malignant tumors in 2016, cancer is the second leading death cause in Argentina. While there is a broad consensus on common risk factors at the individual cancer level, those operating at a contextual level have been poorly studied in developing countries. The objective of our study was to identify socio-environmental patterns in Argentina (2010), emphasizing quality of life, and to explore their associations with the spatial distribution of cancer mortality in the country. METHODS: The study was conducted in 525 geographical divisions nested into 24 provinces. Sex-specific crude and age-standardized mortality rates (ASMR) for cancer (2009-2011 period) were calculated. Empirically derived socio-environmental patterns were identified through principal-component factor analysis on a selected set of variables: an urban scale and 29 indicators of a quality of life index in Argentina for 2010. Two-level Poisson regression models were used to estimate associations between the ASMR and the continuous factor scores for socio-environmental patterns as covariates. A random intercept was included to account for spatial variability in the ASMR distribution using Stata software. RESULTS: Four socio-environmental patterns were identified, termed “Contexts with urban-related resources or cultural capital”, “Socioeconomically prosperous contexts”, “Environments with anthropic exposures” and “Plains region” (cumulative explained variance=57%). High mortality rates were found in counties characterized by socioeconomically prosperous contexts (RR=1.025 in women; 1.088 in men) and plain landscapes (RR=1.057 and 1.117, respectively). Counties featuring urban or cultural resources demonstrated increased mortality in women (RR=1.015, 95%CI=1.005-1.025), whereas rising rates associated with environments having anthropic exposures (RR=1.008, 95%CI=1.001-1.016) were observed only for men. CONCLUSION: This study identified four characteristic socio-environmental patterns in Argentina which incorporate features of quality of life, accounting to some extent for the differential burden of cancer mortality in this country.

Más información

Título de la Revista: Asian Pac J Cancer Prev
Volumen: 19
Número: 11
Fecha de publicación: 2018
Página de inicio: 3045
Página final: 3052
Idioma: English
DOI:

PMID: 30485939 PMCID: PMC6318418 DOI: 10.31557/APJCP.2018.19.11.3045