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© 1998 Oxford University Press

research-article

Stage of colon cancer at diagnosis: implications for risk factor associations?

Martha L Slatterya, Sandra L Edwardsa and Wade Samowitzb

aDepartment of Oncologtcal Sciences, University of Utah 546 Chlpeta Way, Suite 1100, salt Lake City, Utah 84108, USA
bDepartment of Surgical Pathology, University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah 84132, USA

BACKGROUND: A potential source of bias in epidemiological studies comes from studying people at different stages of disease progression. This can result in biased selection of cases or in errors of measurement of exposures.

METHODS: We use stage of disease at the time of diagnosis to evaluate how indusion of people at different stages in the disease process can influence associations between environmental exposures and colon cancer. Data used were generated from a large case-control study of colon cancer.

RESULTS: For most environmental exposures evaluated, including physical activity, body size, use of aspirin and of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and dietary intake of folate and fibre, we did not observe differences in patterns of association by stage of disease at diagnosis. However, for total energy and red meat intake (men only), alcohol consumption, cigarette smoking, and family history of colorectal cancer among first degree relatives, patterns of associations were stronger when colon cancer was detected at an earlier stage of disease progression than when it was detected at a more advanced stage.

CONCLUSIONS: Most exposures did not differ by stage of disease, thus selectively excluding cases at different disease stages should not influence associations between these exposures and colon cancer. Associations for other factors, such as alcohol consumption and cigarette smoking. may be biased from asking cases with advanced disease to recall a non-disease-free time period. Associations with family history may also be biased if those with a family history of colorectal cancer are detected at an earlier stage and therefore more likely to participate in epidemiological studies.

Keywords Colonic neoplasia, bias, cigarette smoking, alcohol, family history, tumour stage

Accepted 16 September 1997


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