| Literature DB >> 22363531 |
Nirmala Bhoo-Pathy1, Mikael Hartman, Cheng-Har Yip, Nakul Saxena, Nur Aishah Taib, Siew-Eng Lim, Philip Iau, Hans-Olov Adami, Awang M Bulgiba, Soo-Chin Lee, Helena M Verkooijen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The burden of breast cancer in Asia is escalating. We evaluated the impact of ethnicity on survival after breast cancer in the multi-ethnic region of South East Asia. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22363531 PMCID: PMC3283591 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0030995
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Distribution of Patient Profile, Tumor Characteristics and Treatment According to Ethnicity in 5,264 Southeast Asian Women with Breast Cancer.
| Total | Chinese | Malay | Indian |
| |
|
|
|
|
| ||
| N (%) | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | ||
|
| 50 | 51 | 46 | 53 | <0·001 |
|
| 30 | 25 | 35 | 30 | <0·001 |
|
| <0·001 | ||||
| Absent | 2 804 (54·7) | 2 106 (57·1) | 429 (46·4) | 269 (52·0) | |
| Present | 2 324 (45·3) | 1 580 (42·9) | 496 (53·6) | 248 (48·0) | |
| Unknown | 136 | 81 | 43 | 12 | |
|
| 0·004 | ||||
| Positive | 2 436 (56·6) | 1 825 (58·1) | 407 (52·5) | 231 (52·5) | |
| Negative | 1 892 (43·4) | 1 315 (41·9) | 368 (47·5) | 209 (47·5) | |
| Unknown | 909 | 627 | 193 | 89 | |
|
| 0.172 | ||||
| Positive | 1 960 (52·4) | 1 469 (53·3) | 321 (50·7) | 170 (48·7) | |
| Negative | 1 778 (47·6) | 1 287 (46·7) | 312 (49·3) | 179 (51·3) | |
| Unknown | 1 526 | 1 011 | 335 | 180 | |
|
| 0.002 | ||||
| Good differentiation | 466 (11·8) | 375 (13·0) | 57 (8·5) | 34 (8·8) | |
| Moderate differentiation | 1 864 (47·4) | 1 368 (47·5) | 313 (46·8) | 183 (47·3) | |
| Poor differentiation | 1 604 (40·8) | 1 135 (39·4) | 299 (44·7) | 170 (43·9) | |
| Unknown | 1 330 | 889 | 299 | 142 | |
|
| <0·001 | ||||
| Complete treatment | 4 140 (90·2) | 3 081 (92·7) | 636 (79·8) | 423 (90·2) | |
| Incomplete treatment | 206 (4·5) | 135 (4·1) | 50 (6·3) | 21 (4·5) | |
| None | 243 (5·3) | 107 (3·2) | 111 (13·9) | 25 (5·3) | |
|
| 0·001 | ||||
| Yes | 3 116 (59·2) | 2 172 (57·7) | 617 (63·7) | 327 (61·8) | |
| No | 2 148 (40·8) | 1 595 (42·3) | 351 (36·3) | 202 (38·2) | |
|
| <0·001 | ||||
| Yes | 2 372 (85·6) | 1 777 (86·5) | 361 (79·0) | 234 (89·7) | |
| No | 400 (14·4) | 277 (13·5) | 96 (21·0) | 27 (10·3) |
Column percentage is presented except for center where row percentage is presented.
Compared using χ2 test for categorical variables and Kruskal Wallis test for continuous variables.
Absolute tumor size was only available in 4 359 patients i.e. in 80.4% of the Chinese, 89.2% of Malays and 88.5% of Indians.
Only includes 4,589 patients with TNM stage I to stage III breast cancer. Complete treatment consists of mastectomy, or breast conserving surgery followed by radiotherapy. Incomplete treatment includes breast conserving surgery only or radiotherapy only.
Only includes 2 772 patients with estrogen or progesterone receptor positive tumors.
Figure 1Cumulative overall survival by ethnicity in 5,264 South East Asian women with breast cancer.
Association between Ethnicity and All-Cause Mortality Following Diagnosis with Breast Cancer in 5,264 Southeast Asian Women.
| Chinese | Malays | Indians | |
| Hazard Ratio | 1.00 | 1·90 | 1·24 |
| (95%CI) | (1·70–2·13) | (1·06–1·44) | |
| Hazard Ratio | 1.00 | 1·45 | 1·15 |
| (95%CI) | (1·29–1·63) | (0·98–1·34) | |
| Hazard Ratio | 1.00 | 1.34 | 1.14 |
| (95%CI) | (1·19–1·51) | (0.98–1.34) |
Estimated from Cox regression model adjusted for age at diagnosis, center, and year of diagnosis.
Estimated from Cox regression model adjusted for age at diagnosis, center, year of diagnosis, tumor size, lymph node involvement, distant metastasis, estrogen receptor status, progesterone receptor status, and tumor grade.
Estimated from Cox regression model adjusted for age at diagnosis, center, year of diagnosis, tumor size, lymph node involvement, distant metastasis, estrogen receptor status, progesterone receptor status, tumor grade, loco-regional therapy, chemotherapy, and hormone therapy.
Association between ethnic groups and lymph node involvement by tumor size in 3,712 Asian women with breast cancer.a
| Ethnicity |
| |||
| Chinese | Malay | Indian | ||
|
| 0.004 | |||
| No nodal involvement, N (%) | 568 (77·0) | 84 (64·6) | 57 (82·6) | |
| Lymph node involvement, N (%) | 170 (23·0) | 46 (35·4) | 12 (17·4) | |
| Adjusted odds ratio for lymph node involvement | 1.00 | 1·57 (1·05–2·37) | 0·64 (0·33–1·24) | |
|
| 0.002 | |||
| No nodal involvement, N (%) | 865 (53·8) | 160 (43·7) | 125 (49·0) | |
| Lymph node involvement, N (%) | 742 (46·2) | 206 (56·3) | 130 (51·0) | |
| Adjusted odds ratio for lymph node involvement | 1.00 | 1·45 (1·15–1·84) | 1·18 (0·89–1·55) | |
|
| 0.215 | |||
| No nodal involvement, N (%) | 105 (30·9) | 34 (25·2) | 16 (2·2) | |
| Lymph node involvement, N (%) | 235 (69·1) | 101 (74·8) | 56 (77·8) | |
| Adjusted odds ratio for lymph node involvement | 1.00 | 1·40 (0·88–2·23) | 1·69 (0·92–3·13) | |
Only including patients with pathologically confirmed tumor size and lymph node status.
Using Chi Square test.
Logistic regression model adjusted for absolute tumor size (mm), tumor grade, estrogen receptor status, and progesterone receptor status.