Assessment of follow-up, and the completeness and accuracy of cancer case ascertainment in three areas of India

Abstract Background : A prospective study of diet and cancer has not been conducted in India; consequently, little is known regarding follow-up rates or the completeness and accuracy of cancer case ascertainment. Methods : We assessed follow-up in the India Health Study (IHS; 4671 participants aged...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer epidemiology 2011-08, Vol.35 (4), p.334-341
Hauptverfasser: Mathew, Aleyamma, Daniel, Carrie R, Ferrucci, Leah M, Seth, Tulika, Devesa, Susan S, George, Preethi S, Shetty, Hemali, Devasenapathy, Niveditha, Yurgalevitch, Susan, Rastogi, Tanuja, Prabhakaran, Dorairaj, Gupta, Prakash C, Chatterjee, Nilanjan, Sinha, Rashmi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Background : A prospective study of diet and cancer has not been conducted in India; consequently, little is known regarding follow-up rates or the completeness and accuracy of cancer case ascertainment. Methods : We assessed follow-up in the India Health Study (IHS; 4671 participants aged 35–69 residing in New Delhi, Mumbai, or Trivandrum). We evaluated the impact of medical care access and relocation, re-contacted the IHS participants to estimate follow-up rates, and conducted separate studies of cancer cases to evaluate registry coverage (604 cases in Trivandrum) and the accuracy of self- and proxy-reporting (1600 cases in New Delhi and Trivandrum). Results : Over 97% of people reported seeing a doctor and 85% had lived in their current residence for over six years. The 2-year follow-up rate was 91% for Trivandrum and 53% for New Delhi. No cancer cases were missed among public institutions participating in the surveillance program in Trivandrum during 2003–2004; but there are likely to be unmatched cases (ranging from 5 to 13% of total cases) from private hospitals in the Trivandrum registry, as there are no mandatory reporting requirements. Vital status was obtained for 36% of cancer cases in New Delhi as compared to 78% in Trivandrum after a period of 4 years. Conclusions : A prospective cohort study of cancer may be feasible in some centers in India with active follow-up to supplement registry data. Inclusion of cancers diagnosed at private institutions, unique identifiers for individuals, and computerized medical information would likely improve cancer registries.
ISSN:1877-7821
1877-783X
DOI:10.1016/j.canep.2011.03.006