Female breast cancer treatment and survival in South Australia: Results from linked health data.
South Australia
breast cancer
differences
survival
treatment
Journal
European journal of cancer care
ISSN: 1365-2354
Titre abrégé: Eur J Cancer Care (Engl)
Pays: England
ID NLM: 9301979
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
Sep 2021
Sep 2021
Historique:
revised:
03
02
2021
received:
27
10
2020
accepted:
18
03
2021
pubmed:
30
3
2021
medline:
30
9
2021
entrez:
29
3
2021
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
We investigated treatment and survival by clinical and sociodemographic characteristics for service evaluation using linked data. Data on invasive female breast cancers (n = 13,494) from the South Australian Cancer Registry (2000-2014 diagnoses) were linked to hospital inpatient, radiotherapy and universal health insurance data. Treatments ≤12 months from diagnosis and survival were analysed, using adjusted odds ratios (aORs) from logistic regression, and adjusted sub-hazard ratios (aSHRs) from competing risk regression. Five-year disease-specific survival increased to 91% for 2010-2014. Most women had breast surgery (90%), systemic therapy (72%) and radiotherapy (60%). Less treatment applied for ages 80+ vs <50 years (aOR 0.10, 95% CI 0.05-0.20) and TNM stage IV vs stage I (aOR 0.13, 95% CI 0.08-0.22). Surgical treatment increased during the study period and strongly predicted higher survival. Compared with no surgery, aSHRs were 0.31 (95% CI 0.26-0.36) for women having breast-conserving surgery, 0.49 (95% CI 0.41-0.57) for mastectomy and 0.42 (95% CI 0.33-0.52) when both surgery types were received. Patients aged 80+ years had lower survival and less treatment. More trial evidence is needed to optimise trade-offs between benefits and harms in these older women. Survival differences were not found by residential remoteness and were marginal by socioeconomic status.
Identifiants
pubmed: 33779005
doi: 10.1111/ecc.13451
pmc: PMC8518966
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Pagination
e13451Subventions
Organisme : National Breast Cancer Foundation
ID : CRP-17-001
Organisme : Cancer Council SA's Beat Cancer Project
Organisme : State Government
Informations de copyright
© 2021 The Authors. European Journal of Cancer Care published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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