Advertisement

Delays in Diagnosis Worsen Outlook for Minority, Uninsured Pediatric Retinoblastoma Patients, Study Finds

Advertisement

Key Points

  • Investigators found that retinoblastoma was more invasive at diagnosis in patients who were nonwhite, Hispanic, uninsured, or covered by Medicaid, with Hispanic ethnicity having the greatest impact on risk.
  • Researchers hope to explore the barriers to timely diagnosis and treatment in future studies.

When retinoblastoma is diagnosed in racial and ethnic minority children whose families don't have private health insurance, it often takes a more invasive, potentially life-threatening course than in other children, probably because of delays in diagnosis, researchers at Dana-Farber/Children's Hospital Cancer Center in Boston are reporting at the 26th annual meeting of the American Society of Pediatric Hematology Oncology in Miami, April 24 to 27.

By analyzing data and tumor samples from 203 children across the United States who had been treated for retinoblastoma, the investigators found that the disease was more invasive at diagnosis in patients who were nonwhite, Hispanic, uninsured, or covered by Medicaid. Researchers now need to explore why the disease tends to be diagnosed later in such children and how those delays can be eliminated, said the study's authors.

There are about 350 new cases of retinoblastomas diagnosed each year in the United States. Treatment may require surgical removal of the affected eye and follow-up chemotherapy.

"The longer that retinoblastomas grow before they're diagnosed and treated, the more invasive they become," said the study's lead author, Adam Green, MD, of Dana-Farber/Children's Hospital Cancer Center. "In this study, we used tumor invasiveness as an indicator of delays in disease diagnosis."

Clinical Trial

Data and tumor tissue used in the study came from children with retinoblastoma participating in a clinical trial run by the Children's Oncology Group. All the patients had the diseased eye surgically removed, and those whose disease was deemed likely to spread received chemotherapy.

Investigators collected data on patients' insurance status, race, and ethnicity. The tumor tissue samples were examined by pathologists for signs that the tumors would metastasize.

"We correlated the demographic data with the results of the pathology exams to see if children with retinoblastoma who were nonwhite, Hispanic, or who did not have private health insurance were more likely to have disease invasiveness at diagnosis requiring chemotherapy in addition to surgery, a stage of disease that may carry a lower survival rate," Dr. Green said. "The answer was yes."

Risk Factors

Of the factors most associated with invasive disease, Hispanic ethnicity had the greatest impact on risk, researchers found, raising the possibility that not speaking English as one's primary language poses a particular barrier to timely diagnosis and treatment.

"We now need to find out where in the diagnostic process the delays are occurring," said the senior author of the study, Carlos Rodriguez-Galindo, MD, of of Dana-Farber/Children's Hospital Cancer Center. "Is it because patients' families aren't familiar with the warning signs of the disease, because they have trouble getting to a primary care doctor or ophthalmologist for an exam, or some other factor? We hope to explore those questions in future studies."

The National Cancer Institute funded this research (grants U10 CA98543 and T32 CA136432).

The content in this post has not been reviewed by the American Society of Clinical Oncology, Inc. (ASCO®) and does not necessarily reflect the ideas and opinions of ASCO®.


Advertisement

Advertisement




Advertisement