There is a paucity of disaggregated data to monitor cancer health inequalities in Canada. We used data linkage to estimate site-specific cancer relative survival by race, immigration status, household income, and education level in Canada. We pooled the Canadian Census Health and Environment Cohorts, which are linked datasets of 5.9 million respondents of the 2006 long-form census and 6.5 million respondents of the 2011 National Household Survey. Individual-level respondent data from these surveys were probabilistically linked with the Canadian Cancer Registry up to 2015 and with the Canadian Vital Statistics Death database up to 2019. We used propensity score matching and Poisson models to calculate age-standardized relative survival by equity stratifiers for all cancers combined and for 22 individual cancer sites for the period 2006-2019. There were 560,905 primary cancer cases diagnosed over follow-up included in survival analyses; the age-standardized period relative survival was 72.9% at 5 years post-diagnosis. 5-year relative survival was higher in immigrants (74.1%, 95%CI 73.8-74.4) than in Canadian-born persons (69.6%, 95%CI 69.4-69.8), and higher in racial groups with high proportions of immigrants. There was a marked socioeconomic gradient, with 11%-12% lower relative survival in cancer patients in the lowest household income and education levels than in the highest levels. Socioeconomic gradients were observed for most cancer sites, though the magnitude varied by site. The observed differences in relative survival suggest there remain important inequities in cancer control and care delivery and quality even in a universal healthcare system.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ijc.35337DOI Listing

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