The validity of self-reported cancer in a population-based cohort compared to that in formally registered sources

Self-reported cancer has been validated with heterogeneous results across populations. The aim was to assess the validity of self-reported cancer in the Lifelines population-based cohort and to search for explanations for not reporting cancer. Data from adult participants (n = 152,780) from Lifeline...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer epidemiology 2022-12, Vol.81, p.102268-102268, Article 102268
Hauptverfasser: Cortés-Ibáñez, Francisco O., van Pinxteren, Bram, Sijtsma, Anna, Bruggink, Annette, Sidorenkov, Grigory, van der Vegt, Bert, de Bock, Geertruida H.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Self-reported cancer has been validated with heterogeneous results across populations. The aim was to assess the validity of self-reported cancer in the Lifelines population-based cohort and to search for explanations for not reporting cancer. Data from adult participants (n = 152,780) from Lifelines was linked to the Dutch-Nationwide pathology databank (PALGA), which has nearly 100% coverage of cancer diagnoses in the Netherlands and is considered as the gold standard for ascertainment of cancer diagnosis in this study. Sensitivity and positive predictive value (PPV) for self-reported cancers -reported as hand-written free text- were described. Logistic regressions analyses were performed to evaluate whether socio-demographic factors were associated with the presence of self-reported cancer when there was a diagnosis in PALGA. 6611 (4.50%) participants had at least one self-reported diagnosis of cancer, where 9960 (6.97%) participants had at least one cancer diagnosis in PALGA. The sensitivity of self-reported cancer was 64.68% [95%CI:63.71–65.66], and 70.18% [95%CI:68.83–71.56] after excluding skin and cervical cancers. Skin and cervical cancers represented 61.24% of non-self-reported cancers. The overall PPV was 97.45% [95%CI:97.45–97.81], and 97.33% [95%CI:96.72–97.82] after the exclusion of skin and cervical cancers. Participants who did not self-report their cancer were more likely to be male, had longer time since diagnosis and lower educational level. Overall, the reports of cancer in Lifelines have a high positive predictive value and moderate sensitivity. One third of the cancers were not reported, mainly skin and cervical cancers. Male participants, those with a lower educational level and those with longer time since diagnosis were less likely to self-report a diagnosed cancer. •Self-reported cancers in the Lifelines population-based cohort have high positive predictive value and moderate sensitivity.•Skin and cervical cancers were the main sources of discrepancies between self-reports and the gold standard source.•Males, those with a lower educational level and longer time since diagnosis were less likely to self-report their cancer.
ISSN:1877-7821
1877-783X
DOI:10.1016/j.canep.2022.102268