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. 2019 Aug 1;5(9):e191742. doi: 10.1001/jamaoncol.2019.1742

Table 3. Relapse or Mortality Among Patients Who Survived More Than 15 Months After Cancer Diagnosisa.

Colorectal NSCLC Prostate Breast
Relapse or deathb
HIV-infected patients 29 26 138 44
Long-term outcomes (% patients) 16 (55.2) 19 (73.1) 60 (43.5) 24 (54.6)
HIV-uninfected patients 43 167 21 932 104 465 88 591
Long-term outcomes (% patients) 25 512 (59.1) 15 487 (70.6) 43 205 (41.4) 41 639 (47.0)
Adjusted HR (95% CI) 1.58 (0.97-2.58) 1.23 (0.79-1.93) 1.32 (1.03-1.71) 1.63 (1.09-2.43)
P value .07 .36 .03 .02
Relapse or cancer-specific death
Cancer outcomes in HIV-infected, No. (%) NRc 12 (46.2) 35 (25.4) 13 (29.6)
Cancer outcomes in HIV-uninfected, No. (%) 11 431 (26.5) 10 655 (48.6) 24 242 (23.2) 17 512 (19.8)
Adjusted HR (95% CI) 1.51 (0.78-2.90) 1.17 (0.67-2.07) 1.28 (0.92-1.78) 1.90 (1.10-3.28)
P value .22 .58 .15 .02

Abbreviations: HR, hazard ratio; NR, not reported; NSCLC, non–small cell lung cancer.

a

Models were adjusted for age, sex, race/ethnicity (white, nonwhite), median census tract income (<$30 000, $30 000-59 000, >$59 000, missing), year (1996-2004, 2005-2012), and stage at diagnosis, but sex adjustment was not applied to prostate and breast cancer.

b

Overall relapse/mortality outcome was defined as death (from any cause) or receipt of additional cancer treatment that occurred at least 15 months after cancer diagnosis; the relapse/cancer-specific mortality outcome was defined as death due specifically to cancer or receipt of additional treatment in this time frame. Follow-up time was calculated from cancer diagnosis until the earlier of either event.

c

Numbers lower than 11 are not reported in accordance with the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results–Medicare data use agreement.