Predictions of survival up to 10 years after diagnosis for European women with breast cancer in 2000-2002


Autoria(s): Allemani, C.; Minicozzi, P.; Sant, M.; Berrino, F.; Bastiaannet, E.; Gavin, A.; Galceran, J.; Ameijide, A.; Siesling, S.; Mangone, L.; Ardanaz, E.; Hédelin, G.; Mateos, A.; Micheli, A.
Data(s)

15/05/2013

Resumo

Few studies have addressed longer-term survival for breast cancer in European women. We have made predictions of 10-year survival for European women diagnosed with breast cancer in 2000-2002. Data for 114,312 adult women (15-99 years) diagnosed with a first primary malignant cancer of the breast during 2000-2002 were collected in the EUROCARE-4 study from 24 population-based cancer registries in 14 European countries. We estimated relative survival at 1, 5, and 10 years after diagnosis for women who were alive at some point during 2000-2002, using the period approach. We also estimated 10-year survival conditional on survival to 1 and 5 years after diagnosis. Ten-year survival exceeded 70% in most regions, but was only 54% in Eastern Europe, with the highest value in Northern Europe (about 75%). Ten-year survival conditional on survival for 1 year was 2-6% higher than 10-year survival in all European regions, and geographic differences were smaller. Ten-year survival for women who survived at least 5 years was 88% overall, with the lowest figure in Eastern Europe (79%) and the highest in the UK (91%). Women aged 50-69 years had higher overall survival than older and younger women (79%). Six cancer registries had adequate information on stage at diagnosis; in these jurisdictions, 10-year survival was 89% for local, 62% for regional and 10% for metastatic disease. Data on stage are not collected routinely or consistently, yet these data are essential for meaningful comparison of population-based survival, which provides vital information for improving breast cancer control. What's new? Policy-makers and health-care planners need accurate data on long-term survival to improve cancer control. This Europe-wide study of 10-year survival identified low survival in Eastern Europe for women with breast cancer in 2000-2002, and wide variation by age at diagnosis. Data on stage at diagnosis are crucial for meaningful comparison of population-based survival, and fundamental for improving breast cancer control, but our analyses confirmed that stage data are not collected routinely or consistently Copyright © 2012 UICC.

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/predictions-of-survival-up-to-10-years-after-diagnosis-for-european-women-with-breast-cancer-in-20002002(1153c7e2-8e6f-4b71-864e-0c38d54e373d).html

http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ijc.27895

http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-84874931728&partnerID=8YFLogxK

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Allemani , C , Minicozzi , P , Sant , M , Berrino , F , Bastiaannet , E , Gavin , A , Galceran , J , Ameijide , A , Siesling , S , Mangone , L , Ardanaz , E , Hédelin , G , Mateos , A & Micheli , A 2013 , ' Predictions of survival up to 10 years after diagnosis for European women with breast cancer in 2000-2002 ' International Journal of Cancer , vol 132 , no. 10 , pp. 2404-2412 . DOI: 10.1002/ijc.27895

Tipo

article