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Follow-up surveillance among colorectal cancer survivors of different sexual orientations. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to explore follow-up surveillance for colorectal cancer survivors based on sexual orientation and factors related to survivors, physicians, and practices.
  • Approximately 10% of participants did not receive follow-up care, with sexual minority survivors being three times more likely to undergo imaging tests compared to heterosexual survivors.
  • The results suggest that having a designated healthcare provider is crucial for receiving follow-up surveillance, emphasizing the need for more research on provider behaviors towards diverse sexual orientation groups in cancer care.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to examine receipt of follow-up surveillance among sexual minority and heterosexual survivors and identify survivor-, physician-, and practice-level characteristics associated with follow-up surveillance.

Methods: An average of 3 years after their stage I-III colorectal cancer diagnosis, we recruited survivors from four cancer registries. A questionnaire, which queried about sexual orientation and other eligibility criteria, was mailed to all cancer survivors. Subsequently, 418 eligible survivors without recurrent disease participated in a telephone survey. Colorectal cancer-specific follow-up surveillance was defined as colonoscopy, carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) test, or imaging test. We used logistic regression with forward selection to obtain models that best explained each follow-up test.

Results: About 10% of survivors received no follow-up surveillance, while 70% had colonoscopies. While survivors irrespective of sexual orientation received follow-up surveillance, sexual minority survivors had 3 times the odds of receiving imaging tests compared to heterosexual survivors. Having a designated provider of any specialty was most salient for the receipt of surveillance.

Conclusions: Sexual minority survivors' greater receipt of imaging tests may indicate providers perceive them at greater risk for recurrence than heterosexual survivors. Future studies need to examine provider behaviors towards monitoring colorectal cancer survivors of diverse sexual orientations.

Implications For Cancer Survivors: Guidelines recommend surveillance of colorectal cancer survivors to improve survival. This study showed that having a designated provider for follow-up is most salient for the receipt of surveillance, most survivors receive surveillance, and sexual minority survivors had more imaging tests compared to heterosexual survivors.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8531882PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11764-021-01039-1DOI Listing

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