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. 2021 Sep 20;24(10):1443–1454. doi: 10.1089/jpm.2020.0696

Table 1.

Characteristics of Patient Participants by Prognosis Level (N = 34)

  Level
p
None (n = 10) Low (n = 14) High (n = 10)
Age in years, median (range) 59.9 (36.3–72.5) 70.6 (37.9–86.3) 67.5 (40.4–83.0) 0.19
Gender, n (%)       0.44
 Female 5 (50) 8 (57) 8 (80)  
Race, n (%)       1
 Black/African American 1 (10) 1 (7) 0 (0)  
 White 8 (80) 11 (79) 9 (90)  
 Other 1 (10) 2 (14) 1 (10)  
Hispanic or Latino ethnicity, n (%)       0.77
 Yes 1 (10) 2 (14) 0 (0)  
Highest education, n (%)       0.96
 ≥Bachelors 2 (20) 4 (29) 2 (20)  
 High school/some college 7 (70) 8 (57) 7 (70)  
 ≤High school 1 (10) 2 (14) 1 (10)  
Financial security, n (%)       0.15
 Secure 2 (20) 8 (62) 6 (60)  
 Partially secure 7 (70) 5 (38) 4 (40)  
 Insecure 1 (10) 0 (0) 0 (0)  
Cancer type, n (%)       0.55
 Lung 3 (30) 1 (7) 1 (10)  
 Gastrointestinal (non-CRC) 0 (0) 3 (21) 1 (10)  
 CRC/breast/prostate 3 (30) 5 (36) 2 (20)  
 Other 4 (40) 5 (36) 6 (60)  
Palliative Performance Scale, median (range) 5.5 (3–9) 4.5 (1–8) 4.5 (1–8) 0.29
Clinicians' estimate of survival time, n (%)       0.53
 <2 Weeks 0 (0) 3 (21) 2 (20)  
 2 Weeks to <3 months 4 (40) 3 (21) 4 (40)  
 ≥3 Months 6 (60) 8 (57) 4 (40)  
Days from enrollment to death, median (range) 27.5 (2–125) 12 (0–142) 31.5 (1–157) 0.44

For statistical significance testing purposes, we used Fisher's exact test for categorical data and Kruskal–Wallis test for continuous data.

CRC, colorectal cancer.