Investigator

Tabassum Z Insaf

Research Associate Professor · University at Albany, State University of New York, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics

Research Interests

TZITabassum Z Insaf
Papers(1)
Association between r…
Collaborators(7)
Ahmedin JemalDaniel WieseFarhad IslamiJordan Baeker BispoMargaret Gates Kulisz…Paulo S PinheiroQinran Liu
Institutions(3)
New York State Depart…American Cancer Socie…University Of Miami

Papers

Association between racialized economic segregation and stage at diagnosis for 3 screenable cancers in New York City

Abstract Background Racial and economic segregation can create barriers to timely cancer diagnosis and adversely affect survival. This study examines the association between neighborhood-level segregation, measured by the neighborhood-Index of Concentration at Extremes (n-ICE), and stage at diagnosis (advanced [regional/distant] vs localized) for 3 screenable cancers in New York City. Methods We analyzed 98 449 incident cases (breast, 58 970; cervical, 4790; and colorectal, 34 689) using New York State Cancer Registry data (2008-2019). Census tract-level n-ICE measures of racial and/or income-based economic segregation were calculated. Age-adjusted stage-specific incidence rates and advanced-to-localized incidence rate ratios (IRRs) were measured across n-ICE quartiles. Results Advanced-to-localized stage IRRs were significantly higher in the most-deprived and/or non-Hispanic Black (NHB)-concentrated areas (Q1) than the most-affluent and/or most non-Hispanic White (NHW)-concentrated areas (Q4) for breast and cervical cancer (breast: n-ICEIncome, IRRQ1 = 0.71 vs IRRQ4 = 0.48; n-ICENHB, IRRQ1 = 0.75 vs IRRQ4 = 0.53; n-ICENHB+Income, IRRQ1 = 0.74 vs IRRQ4 = 0.47; cervical: n-ICEIncome, IRRQ1 = 1.30 vs IRRQ4 = 0.97; n-ICENHB, IRRQ1 = 1.44 vs IRRQ4 = 0.99; n-ICENHB+Income, IRRQ1 = 1.37 vs IRRQ4 = 0.92) (all P-values < .01). Hispanic concentration alone (n-ICEHispanic) was not associated with disparities; however, its combination with economic deprivation was significant in both cancers (breast: n-ICEHispanic+Income, IRRQ1 = 0.70 vs IRRQ4 = 0.47; cervical: n-ICEHispanic+Income, IRRQ1 = 1.31 vs IRRQ4 = 0.93) (all P-values < .01). All racialized-economic segregation measures (n-ICENHB+Income/n-ICEHispanic+Income) showed increasing IRRs with higher segregation for both cancers (all P-trend < .04). No disparities were observed for colorectal cancer. Conclusions Racialized-economic segregation in New York City was associated with higher advanced-stage diagnoses of breast and cervical cancer but not colorectal cancer. These findings may partially reflect both structural barriers that delay timely diagnosis and the impact of local equity-driven initiatives that broaden colorectal cancer screening access.

75Works
1Papers
7Collaborators
Breast NeoplasmsColorectal NeoplasmsNeoplasm StagingUterine Cervical NeoplasmsNeoplasmsProstatic NeoplasmsNeoplasm Grading

Positions

2024–

Research Associate Professor

University at Albany, State University of New York · Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics

2023–

Research Scientist 5

New York State Department of Health · Bureau of Cancer Epidemiology

2013–

Assistant Professor/Lecturer

University at Albany · School of Public Health

2013–

Research Scientist

New York State Department of Health · Center for Environmental Health

2012–

Research Scientist (Contractor)

Battelle Memorial Institute

2010–

Research Scientist

New York State Department of Health · Center for Environmental Health

Education

2012

PhD (Chronic Disease Epidemiology)

University of Albany School of Public Health · Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics

2004

MPH(Epidemiology

University of Massachusetts Amherst · Department of Public Health

1998

MBBS

Gandhi Medical College Bhopal

Country

US

Keywords
Mixed modelslongitudinal data analysisClimate ChangeRacial DisparitiesEnvironmental EpidemiologyChronic Disease Epidemiology