Table 3. Proportion mediated1 of the association between race and cervical cancer mortality by socioeconomic and clinical variables, among women diagnosed with stages I-III disease in SEER 2007–2013*.
Non-Hispanic White | Non-Hispanic Black | Hispanic | |
---|---|---|---|
Insurance | Ref. | 18.6% (11.8%-28.2%) | -----2 |
p <0.001 | |||
Marital Status | Ref. | 14.6% (8.7%-23.5%) | 2.0% (0.0%-72.0%) |
p <0.001 | p = 0.34 | ||
Education | Ref. | 6.2% (2.7%-13.8%) | -----2 |
p = 0.004 | |||
Income | Ref. | 2.7% (0.6%-11.4%) | -----2 |
p = 0.08 | |||
Region | Ref. | 8.1% (3.0%-20.0%) | 23.8% (10.3%-46.0%) |
p = 0.01 | p <0.001 | ||
Stage at diagnosis (Stages I, II, III) | Ref. | 22.0% (8.4%-46.5%) | 10.3% (0.6%-69.1%) |
p = 0.01 | p = 0.23 | ||
Treatment | Ref. | 47.2% (27.9%-67.4%) | -----2 |
p <0.001 |
*Other race removed because none of the factors were mediators
1 All mediation models are mutually adjusted for the other potential mediators (i.e. the model for mediation by insurance status is adjusted for marital status, education, income, region, stage and treatment), and age and year at diagnosis.
2 ----- = Not mediated