1.Income-related Inequalities in Cancer Screening Among Korean Adults Aged 40 and Above: A Cross-sectional Analysis of the Age-varying Mediation of Health Literacy
Hyejin HONG ; Hyun-Jin GOO ; Hyebin CHOI ; Sin KAM ; Jong-Yeon KIM
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2026;59(2):184-193
Objectives:
This study investigated how the mediating effect of health literacy (HL) on the association between income and cancer screening participation varies by age among Korean adults aged 40 years and older, with the aim of identifying the optimal timing for HL interventions.
Methods:
Data from 4171 adults aged ≥40 years in the 2023 Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey were analyzed using moderated mediation analysis implemented with the lavaan.survey package, accounting for the complex sampling design. The Johnson–Neyman technique was used to identify age thresholds at which the mediation effect became statistically significant, and the number needed to benefit (NNB) was calculated to estimate the potential efficiency of interventions targeting this pathway.
Results:
Each 1-quintile increase in income was associated with a 16.0% higher likelihood of undergoing cancer screening (odds ratio=1.16, p<0.001). The mediating effect of HL increased significantly with age (index of moderated mediation=0.000438, p=0.048). Mediation became statistically significant from age 54.2 years (Johnson–Neyman threshold), with the proportion of the total effect mediated rising from 0.1% among adults aged 40–49 years to 8.1% among those aged ≥70 years. The NNB for this pathway indicated substantial intervention efficiency in older adults (NNB=372 for ages ≥70), whereas the mediation effect was not statistically significant in the 50–59 age group.
Conclusions
HL significantly mediated the relationship between income and cancer screening participation from the mid-50s onward, with progressively greater contributions at older ages. These findings support age-differentiated strategies, including structural accessibility improvements for adults in their 40s and early 50s and integrated income–HL interventions for individuals aged ≥55 years. Experimental studies are warranted to confirm these associations.
2.Negative impact of pretreatment anemia on local control after neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy and surgery for rectal cancer.
Hyebin LEE ; Hee Chul PARK ; Won PARK ; Doo Ho CHOI ; Young Il KIM ; Young Suk PARK ; Joon Oh PARK ; Ho Kyung CHUN ; Woo Yong LEE ; Hee Cheol KIM ; Seong Hyeon YUN ; Yong Beom CHO ; Yoon Ah PARK
Radiation Oncology Journal 2012;30(3):117-123
PURPOSE: Although anemia is considered to be a contributor to intra-tumoral hypoxia and tumor resistance to ionizing radiation in cancer patients, the impact of pretreatment anemia on local control after neoadjuvant concurrent chemoradiotherapy (NACRT) and surgery for rectal cancer remains unclear. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We reviewed the records of 247 patients with locally advanced rectal cancer who were treated with NACRT followed by curative-intent surgery. RESULTS: The patients with anemia before NACRT (36.0%, 89/247) achieved less pathologic complete response (pCR) than those without anemia (p = 0.012). The patients with pretreatment anemia had worse 3-year local control than those without pretreatment anemia (86.0% vs. 95.7%, p = 0.005). Multivariate analysis showed that pretreatment anemia (p = 0.035), pathologic tumor and nodal stage (p = 0.020 and 0.032, respectively) were independently significant factors for local control. CONCLUSION: Pretreatment anemia had negative impacts on pCR and local control among patients who underwent NACRT and surgery for rectal cancer. Strategies maintaining hemoglobin level within normal range could potentially be used to improve local control in rectal cancer patients.
Anemia
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Anoxia
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Chemoradiotherapy
;
Hemoglobins
;
Humans
;
Multivariate Analysis
;
Neoadjuvant Therapy
;
Polymerase Chain Reaction
;
Radiation, Ionizing
;
Rectal Neoplasms
;
Reference Values

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