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    Int J Cancer. 2012 Jul 20. doi: 10.1002/ijc.27725. [Epub ahead of print]

    Breast cancer survival in the US and Europe: A CONCORD high-resolution study.

    Source

    Cancer Research UK Cancer Survival Group, Department of Non-Communicable Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London WC1E 7HT, UK; Analytical Epidemiology Unit, Department of Preventive and Predictive Medicine, Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori, via Venezian 1, I-20133 Milan, Italy. claudia.allemani@lshtm.ac.uk.

    Abstract

    Breast cancer survival is reportedly higher in the US than in Europe. The first worldwide study (CONCORD) found wide international differences in age-standardised survival. The aim of this study is to explain these survival differences. Population-based data on stage at diagnosis, diagnostic procedures, treatment and follow-up were collected for about 20,000 women diagnosed with breast cancer aged 15-99 years during 1996-98 in 7 US states and 12 European countries. Age-standardised net survival and the excess hazard of death up to five years after diagnosis were estimated by jurisdiction (registry, country, European region), age and stage with flexible parametric models. Breast cancers were generally less advanced in the US than in Europe. Stage also varied less between US states than between European jurisdictions. Early, node-negative tumours were more frequent in the US (39%) than in Europe (32%), while locally advanced tumours were twice as frequent in Europe (8%), and metastatic tumours of similar frequency (5-6%). Net survival in Northern, Western and Southern Europe (82-85%) was similar to that in the US (84%), but lower in Eastern Europe (72%). For the first 3 years after diagnosis the mean excess hazard was higher in Eastern Europe than elsewhere: the difference was most marked for women aged 70-99 years, and mainly confined to women with locally advanced or metastatic tumours. Differences in breast cancer survival between Europe and the US in the late 1990s were mainly explained by lower survival in Eastern Europe, where low healthcare expenditure may have constrained the quality of treatment. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

    Copyright © 2012 UICC.

    PMID:
    22815141
    [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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