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RESEARCH AND PRACTICE |
Thomas M. Becker, James Bettles, Jodi Lapidus, and L. D. Robertson are with the Northwest Tribal Epidemiology Center, Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board, Portland, Ore. Joseph Campo is with the Washington State Cancer Registry, Olympia. Christopher J. Johnson is with the Cancer Data Registry of Idaho, Boise. Donald Shipley is with the Oregon State Cancer Registry, Portland.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Thomas M. Becker, MD, PhD, Department of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Oregon Health and Sciences University, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Rd, CB 669, Portland, OR 97201-3098 (e-mail: beckert{at}ohsu.edu).
| INTRODUCTION |
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We conducted record linkage studies to evaluate the extent of racial misclassification of AI/ANs in the cancer registries for Idaho, Oregon, and Washington states that constitute the administrative unit of the Indian Health Service (IHS) known as the Portland Area IHS. We also calculated estimates of cancer incidence among AI/ANs in these states.
| METHODS |
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To link the state cancer registry data from 19961997 to the NTR, we used AutoMatch software (Version 4.2, Matchware Technologies, Inc, Kennebunk, Me, 1998), which employs probabilistic record linkage algorithms. For data analyses, we included matched records for patients identified as AI/AN by both the NTR and the cancer registries (these cases were considered "correctly classified") and matched records for patients identified by the cancer registries as non-AI/AN (these cases were considered "incorrectly classified" by the state registries). All nonmatched records were excluded from further analyses, including cases that were classified as AI/AN in the state registry data but did not match with any individual in the NTR (Table 1
).
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| RESULTS |
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Of the total 412 cases (37 in situ and 375 invasive cases) considered for this report, 181 (43.9%) occurred in males and 231 (56.1%) in females. Washington State contributed the largest proportion of linked cases (66.0%), followed by Oregon (24.8%) and Idaho (9.2%). Rate calculations were based only on invasive cases. The postlinkage age-adjusted rate for invasive cancer of all sites, both sexes combined, was 257.5 per 100 000 person-years (95% CI = 219.0, 296.1). The rate for males (Table 2
) was higher than the rate for females (Table 3
).
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| DISCUSSION |
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Without valid and accurate cancer data, tribal communities and policymakers will be misinformed, ultimately leading to the development of inappropriate or poorly targeted public health interventions for cancer. Reduction of AI/AN racial misclassification may be partially achieved through clinician education and by training registry chart abstractors and reporting officials to look for comments about AI/AN race in medical records and other documents used at the time of cancer registration.11
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| Acknowledgments |
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The authors wish to thank the following colleagues for assistance with this project: Brenda Edwards, PhD; Judith Swan, MPH; Nat Cobb, MD; Charles Wiggins, PhD; Donald Austin, MD; Lori Lambert, MA; David Espey, MD, Paul Stehr-Green, DrPH; Cathie Pedersen; Esther Dunn; Grazia Ori Cunningham; and Kurt Schweigman, MPH.
Human Participant Protection
Approval for this study was granted by the Indian Health Service institutional review board.
| Footnotes |
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T. M. Becker oversaw all aspects of the study design, implementation, and analysis, as well as the writing process. L. D.Robertson planned the study, designed the linkage methods, reviewed the first draft, and revised the brief. J. Bettles prepared the Northwest Tribal Registry, conducted the probabilistic record linkages with the state cancer registries, and acted as liaison with affected tribal communities. J. Lapidus imported the data from the linkage software into a statistical package, designed and ran all analyses, interpreted the results, and wrote the Results section. C. J.Johnson prepared the Idaho data for linkage, helped evaluate the results of the linkage, and helped revise the brief. J. Campo provided access to the Washington State Cancer Registry database, assessed those data in comparison with our own internal evaluation of race coding, and reviewed the initial draft. D. Shipley helped to plan and arrange the linkage and analyze and interpret the results.
Accepted for publication May 14, 2002.
| References |
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2. Frost F, Tollestrup K, Ross A, Sabotta E, Kimball E. Correctness of racial coding of American Indians and Alaska Native on the Washington State death certificate. Am J Prev Med. 1994;10:290294.[Medline]
3. Sugarman JR, Lawson L. The effect of racial misclassification on estimates of end-stage renal disease among AI/AN and Alaska Natives in the Pacific Northwest, 1988 through 1990. Am J Kidney Dis. 1993;21:383386.[Medline]
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9. Stehr-Green P, Bettles J, Robertson LD. Effect of racial/ethnic misclassification of American Indians and Alaskan Natives on Washington State death certificates, 19891997. Am J Public Health. 2002;1992:443444.
10. Hosmer DW, Lemeshow S. Applied Logistic Regression. New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons Inc; 1989.
11. Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program Data (19921996) [CD-ROM]. Bethesda, Md: National Cancer Institute; 1998.
12. Lanier A, Keyy JJ, Holck P, Smith B, McEvoy T. Alaska Native cancer update, by service unit and year. Anchorage: Alaska Native Health Board; 1999.
13. Wiggins CL, Becker TM, Thomas DB. Determinants of racial misclassification of American Indians in a central cancer registry. Abstract presented at: Annual Meeting of the North American Association of Central Cancer Registries; April 1520, 2000; New Orleans, La.
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