## Abstract This article describes the characteristics of 3 dominant features of breast cancer epidemiology. These characteristics include the association of disease risk with childbearing, its relationship to ovarian activity and its international variation (particularly as the latter differs in t
The comparative epidemiology of benign breast lumps and breast cancer in Western Australia
β Scribed by N. T. Fleming; Dr. B. K. Armstrong; H. J. Sheiner
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1982
- Tongue
- French
- Weight
- 593 KB
- Volume
- 30
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0020-7136
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Totals of 313 patients with breast cancer and 1,283 patients biopsied for benign breast lumps were found in Western Australia in 1978 through review of all histopathological, hospital and cancer registry records. The incidence of breast cancer rose to 146.9 per 100,000 at age 45β54 years and thereafter increased little. The biopsy rate for benign breast lumps rose more sharply to 420.2 per 100,000 at age 45β54 years and then fell. This pattern was mainly due to benign mammary dysplasia (BMD); fibroadenoma showed an earlier peak biopsy rate (30β34 years) and other (mainly nonβneoplastic) benign lumps were biopsied at a relatively constant rate throughout adult life. Rates of breast cancer, BMD and fibroadenoma showed similar relationships to the other descriptive variables studied. The rates of each were higher in single than married women, in residents of the Perth area than residents of other parts of the State and in women employed in professional and related occupations than other employed women. They were lower in migrants from Europe (excluding Great Britain) than nativeβborn Australians and in women of low socioβeconomic status than women of high status. Not all these differences were statistically significant. Rates of other breast lumps did not generally vary in these ways and were conversely related to country of birth, area of residence and socioeconomic status. The parallels in descriptive epidemiology between breast cancer, BMD and fibroadenoma suggest that they may share aetiological factors.
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## Abstract The incidence rate for cancer of the breast is comparatively low in India. Cancer of the cervix is more common than cancer of the breast amongst Indian women. Wide variations in the frequency of cancer of the breast have been observed amongst the religious communities of Western India.