## Abstract ## BACKGROUND: In prior studies, the use of standard breast cancer treatments has varied by race, but previous analyses were not nationally representative. Therefore, in a comprehensive, national cohort of Medicare patients, racial disparities in the use of radiotherapy (RT) after brea
A retrospective study of the effect of participation in screening mammography on the use of chemotherapy and breast conserving surgery
β Scribed by Andrew J. Coldman; Norm Phillips; Caroline Speers
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- French
- Weight
- 78 KB
- Volume
- 120
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0020-7136
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
A population sample was obtained from the British Columbia (BC) Cancer Registry of all women diagnosed with a first breast cancer in 2002 who were resident in Greater Vancouver or Greater Victoria, BC. Information on treatment and prognostic factors were obtained from source records. The study group was linked to the records of the Screening Mammography Program of BC to identify screening histories on women prior to diagnosis. Logistic regression was used to determine the relationship between screening participation and treatment and to predict treatment use from prognostic factors. Fifteen hundred and eightyβnine women with breast cancer were included in the study and 1,071 (67%) had participated in screening prior to diagnosis: 786 (49%) had been screened within the 30 months prior to their diagnosis (regular participants). Breast conserving surgery (BCS) rates were higher (OR = 2.3, p < 0.001) and chemotherapy use lower (OR = 0.53, p < 0.001) among regular participants compared with nonparticipants after adjustment for age. A predictive model based on the distribution of prognostic factors between participants provided estimates of OR = 1.47 and OR = 0.54 for BCS and chemotherapy, respectively, and adjustment for selfβselection changed the predicted values to OR = 1.16 and OR = 0.67, respectively. Participation in screening produced a considerable change in the use of chemotherapy but less on BCS use. Β© 2007 WileyβLiss, Inc.
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## Background: This study explores the influence of socioeconomic status (ses) and black race on the use of breast-conserving surgery (bcs) as opposed to mastectomy for early stage breast carcinoma. ## Methods: A cohort of 41,937 female medicare inpatients age 65-79 years who had undergone bcs or
There is concern that hormone replacement therapy (HRT) increases the risk of breast cancer. We undertook a casecontrol study of this risk relationship within a cohort of 40-to 74-year-old women in Uppsala County, Sweden, who participated in mammography screening. Incident cases of breast cancer wer