Objective: Our aim was to investigate the reliability of the information on family history of cancer in first-degree relatives in a hospital-based case-control study. Study Design and Setting: We re-interviewed at home 294 controls of an Italian hospital-based case-control study on digestive tract neoplasms using the same questionnaire and compared the responses reported by these patients in the two settings. Results: A satisfactory agreement between the two interviews was reported for family history of any cancer (kappa = 0.7) and of cancers of the digestive tract (kappa = 0.8). The agreement was apparently higher for esophageal and stomach cancers (kappa > 0.8) than for intestinal cancers (kappa = 0.6) and lower for lung cancer (kappa = 0.5). We found a systematic tendency to report a history of cancer more frequently in the hospital setting than in the home setting. Conclusion: The present study showed a good reliability of data on family history of all cancers, including cancers of the digestive tract, provided by hospital controls through a structured interview-administered questionnaire. It suggests, moreover, that controls in the hospital setting tend to recall more often, and presumably more completely, a family history of cancer. (c) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Bravi F, Bosetti C, Negri E, Lagiou P, La Vecchia C (2007). Family history of cancer provided by hospital controls was satisfactorily reliable. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 60(2), 171-175 [10.1016/j.jclinepi.2006.05.007].
Family history of cancer provided by hospital controls was satisfactorily reliable
Negri E;
2007
Abstract
Objective: Our aim was to investigate the reliability of the information on family history of cancer in first-degree relatives in a hospital-based case-control study. Study Design and Setting: We re-interviewed at home 294 controls of an Italian hospital-based case-control study on digestive tract neoplasms using the same questionnaire and compared the responses reported by these patients in the two settings. Results: A satisfactory agreement between the two interviews was reported for family history of any cancer (kappa = 0.7) and of cancers of the digestive tract (kappa = 0.8). The agreement was apparently higher for esophageal and stomach cancers (kappa > 0.8) than for intestinal cancers (kappa = 0.6) and lower for lung cancer (kappa = 0.5). We found a systematic tendency to report a history of cancer more frequently in the hospital setting than in the home setting. Conclusion: The present study showed a good reliability of data on family history of all cancers, including cancers of the digestive tract, provided by hospital controls through a structured interview-administered questionnaire. It suggests, moreover, that controls in the hospital setting tend to recall more often, and presumably more completely, a family history of cancer. (c) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.