Advanced Stage at Presentation Remains a Major Factor Contributing to Breast Cancer Survival Disparity between Public and Private Hospitals in a Middle-Income Country
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Demographics and Clinical Characteristics
3.2. Treatment
3.3. Survival
4. Discussion
5. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Overall (n = 3966) n, % | UMMC (n = 2767) n, % | UMSC (n = 1199) n, % | Adjusted OR (95% CI) a | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Age of diagnosis (Years) | ||||
Median (range) | 52 (23–95) | 53 (23–95) | 50 (23–92) | |
<40 | 477 (12.0%) | 340 (12.3%) | 137 (11.4%) | 1 |
40–59 | 2392 (60.3%) | 1609 (58.1%) | 783 (65.3%) | 1.01 (0.80–1.28) |
≥60 | 1097 (27.7%) | 818 (29.6%) | 279 (23.3%) | 1.68 (1.29–2.19) * |
Ethnicity | ||||
Chinese | 2627 (66.2%) | 1572 (56.8%) | 1055 (88.0%) | 1 |
Malay | 826(20.8%) | 750(27.1%) | 76 (6.3%) | 6.25 (4.85–8.06) * |
Indian | 481 (12.1%) | 417 (15.1%) | 64 (5.3%) | 4.20 (3.17–5.56) * |
Other | 32 (0.8%) | 28 (1.0%) | 4 (0.3%) | 4.80 (1.66–13.87) * |
Stage | ||||
Stage I | 977 (24.6%) | 598 (21.6%) | 379 (31.6%) | 1 |
Stage II | 1555 (39.2%) | 1040 (37.6%) | 515 (43.0%) | 1.20 (1.01–1.44) * |
Stage III | 993 (25.0%) | 747 (27.0%) | 246 (20.5%) | 1.71 (1.39–2.11) * |
Stage IV | 434 (10.9%) | 376 (13.6%) | 58 (4.8%) | 3.30 (2.38–4.58) * |
Unknown | 7 (0.2%) | 6 (0.2%) | 1 (0.1%) | 1.45 (0.16–13.49) |
Tumor size (cm) | ||||
Median (range) | 3 (0–31) | 3 (0–31) | 2.5 (0–20) | |
<2 | 759 (19.1%) | 457 (16.5%) | 302 (25.2%) | 1 |
2–5 | 2187 (55.1%) | 1489 (53.8%) | 698 (58.2%) | 1.27 (1.05–1.53) * |
>5 | 829 (20.9%) | 691 (25.0%) | 138 (11.5%) | 2.19 (1.65–2.90) * |
Unknown | 191 (4.8%) | 130 (4.7%) | 61 (5.1%) | 1.33 (0.92–1.91) |
Involved axillary nodes | ||||
0 | 1858 (46.8%) | 1203 (43.5%) | 655 (54.6%) | 1 |
1–3 | 764 (19.3%) | 514 (18.6%) | 250 (20.9%) | 1.02 (0.84–1.24) |
4–9 | 402 (10.1%) | 286 (10.3%) | 116 (9.7%) | 0.98 (0.75–1.27) |
≥10 | 332 (8.4%) | 250 (9.0%) | 82 (6.8%) | 1.18 (0.88–1.59) |
Unknown | 610 (15.4%) | 514 (18.6%) | 96 (0.8%) | 1.48 (1.08–2.02) * |
Distant metastasis | ||||
No b | 3532 (89.1%) | 2391 (86.4%) | 1141 (95.2%) | 1 |
Yes | 434 (10.9%) | 376 (13.6%) | 58 (4.8%) | 1.66 (1.19–2.32) * |
Grade | ||||
Good | 289 (7.3%) | 192 (6.9%) | 97 (8.1%) | 1 |
Moderate | 1483 (37.4%) | 987 (35.7%) | 496 (41.4%) | 0.94 (0.71–1.26) |
Poor | 1198 (30.2%) | 844 (30.5%) | 354 (29.5%) | 1.04 (0.76–1.42) |
Unknown | 996 (25.1%) | 744 (26.9%) | 252 (21.0%) | 1.03 (0.75–1.41) |
Estrogen receptor status | ||||
Negative | 1474 (37.2%) | 1048 (37.9%) | 426 (35.5%) | 1 |
Positive | 2252 (56.8%) | 1538 (55.6%) | 714 (59.5%) | 0.87 (0.70–1.08) |
Unknown | 240 (6.1%) | 181 (6.5%) | 59 (4.9%) | 0.20 (0.11–0.39) * |
Progesterone receptor status | ||||
Negative | 1671 (42.1%) | 1159 (41.9%) | 512 (42.7%) | 1 |
Positive | 1874 (47.3%) | 1262 (45.6%) | 612 (51.0%) | 1.15 (0.93–1.42) |
Unknown | 421 (10.6%) | 346 (12.5%) | 75 (6.3%) | 3.47 (2.09–5.75) * |
HER2 status | ||||
Negative | 1933 (48.7%) | 1341 (48.5%) | 592 (49.4%) | 1 |
Positive | 1086 (27.4%) | 768 (27.8%) | 318 (26.5%) | 0.97 (0.81–1.16) |
Equivocal | 513 (12.9%) | 313 (11.3%) | 200 (16.7%) | 0.64 (0.51–0.80) * |
Unknown | 434 (10.9%) | 345 (12.5%) | 89 (7.4%) | 1.19 (0.77–1.82) |
Overall n, % | UMMC n, % | UMSC n, % | Adjusted OR (95% CI) a | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Surgery b | ||||
Overall | ||||
No | 285 (8.1%) | 233 (9.8%) | 52 (4.6%) | |
Yes | 3240 (91.9%) | 2152 (90.2%) | 1088 (95.4%) | 0.88 (0.43–1.79) c |
Type of surgery * | ||||
Yes, mastectomy | 2412 (74.4%) | 1644 (76.4%) | 768 (70.6%) | |
Yes, breast conserving surgery | 824 (25.4%) | 508 (23.6%) | 316 (29.0%) | |
Yes, unknown | 4 (0.1%) | 0 | 4 (0.4%) | |
Radiotherapy b | ||||
Overall | ||||
No | 1204 (37.9%) | 850 (38.7%) | 354 (36.2%) | |
Yes | 1970 (62.1%) | 1347 (61.3%) | 623 (63.8%) | 0.83 (0.70–0.99) d |
Unknown | 351 | 188 | 163 | |
By surgical status | ||||
Yes, after breast conserving surgery * | 694 (84.2%) | 443 (87.2%) | 251 (79.4%) | |
Yes, after mastectomy * | 1263 (52.4%) | 893 (54.3%) | 370 (48.2%) | |
Yes, with no surgery | 13 (4.6%) | 11 (4.7%) | 2 (3.8%) | |
Chemotherapy | ||||
Overall | ||||
No | 1421 (36.7%) | 1003 (36.4%) | 418 (37.4%) | |
Yes | 2451 (63.3%) | 1751 (63.6%) | 700 (62.6%) | 1.18 (0.99–1.40) e |
Unknown | 94 | 13 | 81 | |
By stage | ||||
Yes, stage I–III * | 2182 (61.9%) | 1521 (63.8%) | 661 (58.0%) | |
Yes, stage IV | 268 (61.8%) | 229 (60.9%) | 39 (67.2%) | |
Yes, stage unknown | 1 (12.5%) | 1 (14.3%) | 0 | |
Type of chemotherapy regime *,f | ||||
1st generation (CMF) | 55 (2.6%) | 48 (3.1%) | 7 (1.2%) | |
2nd generation (anthracycline-based) | 1616 (76.4%) | 1295 (83.7%) | 321 (56.6%) | |
3rd generation (taxane-based) | 444 (21.0%) | 205 (13.2%) | 239 (42.2%) | |
Unknown | 336 | 203 | 133 | |
Hormone therapy | ||||
Overall | ||||
No | 1243 (36.0%) | 919 (37.4%) | 324 (32.7%) | |
Yes | 2208 (64.0%) | 1540 (62.6%) | 668 (67.3%) | 0.90 (0.77–1.06) g |
Unknown | 515 | 308 | 207 | |
By ER status | ||||
Yes, ER positive * | 1982 (88.0%) | 1366 (88.8%) | 616 (86.3%) | |
Yes, ER negative * | 176 (11.9%) | 137 (13.1%) | 39 (9.2%) | |
Yes, ER status unknown | 50 | 37 (20.4%) | 13 (22.0%) |
Five-Year Survival Estimate | Ten-Year Survival Estimate | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
UMMC | UMSC | UMMC | UMSC | |
Overall a | 71.6% (69.8%–73.4%) | 86.8% (84.8%–88.8%) | 52.3% (50.1%–54.5%) | 76.6% (73.7%–79.5%) |
Number of patients | 2763 | 1193 | 2763 | 1193 |
Number of deaths | 784 | 158 | 1144 | 233 |
By Stage | ||||
Stage I b | 92.6% (90.4%–94.8%) | 95.8% (93.8%–97.8%) | 82.7% (79.2%–86.2%) | 89.4% (85.7%–93.1%) |
Number of patients | 597 | 378 | 597 | 378 |
Number of deaths | 44 | 16 | 82 | 31 |
Stage II a | 83.5% (81.1%–85.9%) | 91.2% (88.8%–93.6%) | 64.3% (61.0%–67.6%) | 81.4% (77.5%–85.3%) |
Number of patients | 1038 | 513 | 1038 | 513 |
Number of deaths | 171 | 45 | 306 | 78 |
Stage III a | 62.6% (59.1%–66.1%) | 74.9% (69.4%–80.4%) | 37.9% (34.0%–41.8%) | 59.2% (51.6%–66.8%) |
Number of patients | 746 | 243 | 746 | 243 |
Number of deaths | 279 | 61 | 411 | 83 |
Stage IV c | 23.4% (19.1%–27.7%) | 37.9% (25.4%–50.4%) | 2.5% (0.5%–4.5%) | 14.6% (−1.1%–30.3%) |
Number of patients | 376 | 58 | 376 | 58 |
Number of deaths | 288 | 36 | 343 | 41 |
Total | UMSC | UMMC | Change in HR from Prior Model | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Number of patients | 3956 | 1193 | 2763 | |
Number of deaths | 1436 | 240 | 1196 | |
Hazard ratio model A (95% CI) a | 1 (ref) | 2.22 (1.94–2.55) | ||
Hazard ratio model B (95% CI) b | 1 (ref) | 2.06 (1.78–2.38) | 7.21% | |
Hazard ratio model C (95% CI) c | 1 (ref) | 1.65 (1.43–1.91) | 19.90% | |
Hazard ratio model D (95% CI) d | 1 (ref) | 1.59 (1.36–1.85) | 3.64% |
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Kong, Y.-C.; Bhoo-Pathy, N.; Subramaniam, S.; Bhoo-Pathy, N.; Taib, N.A.; Jamaris, S.; Kaur, K.; See, M.-H.; Ho, G.-F.; Yip, C.-H. Advanced Stage at Presentation Remains a Major Factor Contributing to Breast Cancer Survival Disparity between Public and Private Hospitals in a Middle-Income Country. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2017, 14, 427. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph14040427
Kong Y-C, Bhoo-Pathy N, Subramaniam S, Bhoo-Pathy N, Taib NA, Jamaris S, Kaur K, See M-H, Ho G-F, Yip C-H. Advanced Stage at Presentation Remains a Major Factor Contributing to Breast Cancer Survival Disparity between Public and Private Hospitals in a Middle-Income Country. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2017; 14(4):427. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph14040427
Chicago/Turabian StyleKong, Yek-Ching, Nirmala Bhoo-Pathy, Shridevi Subramaniam, Nanthini Bhoo-Pathy, Nur Aishah Taib, Suniza Jamaris, Kiran Kaur, Mee-Hoong See, Gwo-Fuang Ho, and Cheng-Har Yip. 2017. "Advanced Stage at Presentation Remains a Major Factor Contributing to Breast Cancer Survival Disparity between Public and Private Hospitals in a Middle-Income Country" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 14, no. 4: 427. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph14040427
APA StyleKong, Y. -C., Bhoo-Pathy, N., Subramaniam, S., Bhoo-Pathy, N., Taib, N. A., Jamaris, S., Kaur, K., See, M. -H., Ho, G. -F., & Yip, C. -H. (2017). Advanced Stage at Presentation Remains a Major Factor Contributing to Breast Cancer Survival Disparity between Public and Private Hospitals in a Middle-Income Country. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 14(4), 427. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph14040427