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Based on the inverse variance weighted method, GERD was found to substantially increase lung cancer risk.
Prostate cancer-specific mortality was low for men randomly assigned to active monitoring, prostatectomy or radiotherapy.
Cancer survivors who received chemotherapy are more likely to have fracture; the link were stronger within five years of diagnosis.
Of the reduction, 29% was due to treatment of metastatic breast cancer and 25% was due to mammography screening.
In older patients, unintentional weight loss was both more common and more likely to be recognized.
The year-over-year age difference was an independent predictor for adjuvant radiation and endocrine therapy recommendations at age 70 versus 69 years.
Racial and ethnic disparities, however, persisted for various cancers, including prostate, male lung and bronchus, and female colorectal cancer.
A reduction was seen in the rate of one or more opioid days and in the rate of one or more pain-related hospital events.
Older age, white race, and higher education were patient factors associated with initial active surveillance uptake in an unadjusted analysis.
At 30 days after discharge, the mortality rate was 3.2% and skilled nursing facility use rate was 2.6%.