| Literature DB >> 26690183 |
Zhenkun Wang1, Junzhe Bao2, Chuanhua Yu3,4, Jinyao Wang5, Chunhui Li6.
Abstract
To describe the temporal trends of breast cancer mortality in East Asia and to better understand the causes of these trends, we analyzed the independent effects of chronological age, time period and birth cohort on breast cancer mortality trends using age-period-cohort (APC) analysis. We chose three main countries in East Asia, namely China, South Korea, and Japan, which have reported death status to the WHO Mortality Database, and used the United States as a comparison population. Our study shows that in general, breast cancer mortality rates in females increased in all three East Asian countries throughout the study period. By APC analysis, we confirmed that there is, in fact, a difference in age-specific mortality rate patterns between the Eastern and the Western countries, which is presumably caused by the two-disease model. While the cause of the decrease from approximately the 1950s generation is still in question, we believe that increasing general awareness and improvements in the health-care system have made a significant contribution to it. Although the age and cohort effects are relatively strong, the period effect may be a more critical factor in the mortality trend, mainly reflecting the increase in exposures to carcinogens and behavioral risk factors.Entities:
Keywords: APC; East Asia; US; breast cancer; mortality
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26690183 PMCID: PMC4690929 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph121214993
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Trends in the five-year moving average world-standardized mortality rates per 100,000 population for breast cancer in the four East Asian areas and the US.
Figure 2Top: Age, period and cohort effect on breast cancer mortality in urban China (bars around the point estimate indicate the 95% confidence intervals). Bottom: Age, period and cohort effect on breast cancer mortality in rural China (bars around the point estimate indicate the 95% confidence intervals).
Figure 3Age, period and cohort effect on breast cancer mortality in South Korea (bars around the point estimate indicate the 95% confidence intervals).
Figure 4Age, period and cohort effect on breast cancer mortality in Japan (bars around the point estimate indicate the 95% confidence intervals).
Figure 5Age, period and cohort effect on breast cancer mortality in the US (bars around the point estimate indicate the 95% confidence intervals).