CIECS   20730
CENTRO DE INVESTIGACIONES Y ESTUDIOS SOBRE CULTURA Y SOCIEDAD
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Socio-environmental exposures explaining the opposites spatial patterns of mortality due to breast and cervical cancer in Argentinean women
Autor/es:
POU SONIA; DÍAZ MARÍA DEL PILAR; NICLIS CAMILA; BUTINOF MARIANA
Lugar:
evento virtual
Reunión:
Conferencia; 32nd Annual Conference of the International Society for Environmental Epidemiology; 2020
Institución organizadora:
International Society for Environmental Epidemiology
Resumen:
Background: This work aimed to characterize the spatial patterns of breast (BC) and cervix (CC) cancer mortalities in Argentina (2013-2015) and to propose a socio-environmental model explaining the observed differences.Methods: An ecological multigroup design (2013-2015; n=511 counties nested in 24 provinces) were carried out in Argentina. Age-standardized mortality rates (SMR) of BC and CC by county were estimated. Using the 2013-2015 average rates by cancer type, a Getis-Ord analysis was performed to identify spatial clusters of high (hot spots) and low (cold spots) values of SMRs. A two-level logistic regression model was fixed to assess the relationship between the presence of hot and cold spots of each cause, accounting the spatial variability. Finally, mixed-effects Poisson regression models was fitted using BC or CC SMR as outcomes and agricultural activity -AA- level (null/intermediate/high), urban scale (big cities/middle-sized or small cities/towns) and % households with unsatisfied basic needs (UBN) as fixed effects-covariates, including a random intercept (province as clustering variable). Interaction terms between AA and UBN levels were also included.Results: Mortality spatial patterns were opposite between CC and BC. The presence of BC hot spot was significantly associated with the presence of CC cold spot. Increased risk of BC mortality was associated with higher AA level. This effect was not independent of UBN, given that in the intermediate AA areas, UBN was inversely associated with BC mortality. Besides, lower BC mortality risk was linked to the smallest urban scales (vs. big cities). An opposite effect of the urban scale was observed for CC mortality. Finally, significant interaction terms between AA and UBN levels were found, showing that in areas with high AA, increasing NBI was associated with higher CC SMR.Conclusions: Concomitant socio-environmental exposures linked to socioeconomic contextual conditions, anthropic exposures and urbanization level could explain the observed differences.