| Literature DB >> 28492725 |
René Aloísio da Costa Vieira1,2, Gabriele Biller1, Gilberto Uemura2, Carlos Alberto Ruiz3, Maria Paula Curado4.
Abstract
Developing countries have limited healthcare resources and use different strategies to diagnose breast cancer. Most of the population depends on the public healthcare system, which affects the diagnosis of the tumor. Thus, the indicators observed in developed countries cannot be directly compared with those observed in developing countries because the healthcare infrastructures in developing countries are deficient. The aim of this study was to evaluate breast cancer screening strategies and indicators in developing countries. A systematic review and the Population, Intervention, Comparison, Outcomes, Timing, and Setting methodology were performed to identify possible indicators of presentation at diagnosis and the methodologies used in developing countries. We searched PubMed for the terms "Breast Cancer" or "Breast Cancer Screening" and "Developing Country" or "Developing Countries". In all, 1,149 articles were identified. Of these articles, 45 full articles were selected, which allowed us to identify indicators related to epidemiology, diagnostic intervention (diagnostic strategy, diagnostic infrastructure, percentage of women undergoing mammography), quality of intervention (presentation of symptoms at diagnosis, time to diagnosis, early stage disease), comparisons (trend curves, subpopulations at risk) and survival among different countries. The identification of these indicators will improve the reporting of methodologies used in developing countries and will allow us to evaluate improvements in public health related to breast cancer.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28492725 PMCID: PMC5401614 DOI: 10.6061/clinics/2017(04)09
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clinics (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1807-5932 Impact factor: 2.365
Figure 1PRISMA records flow diagram.
Indirect indicators related to breast cancer diagnosis in DCs.
| PICOT | Factor | Indicator | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Population | Breast cancer | Epidemiological | Incidence of breast cancer |
| Intervention | Methodology or diagnostic condition | Diagnosis | Diagnostic strategy methodology |
| Quality | Form of presentation of symptoms at diagnosis | ||
| Comparator | Control | Trend curves/temporal data | |
| Outcome | Final outcome | Survival | Mortality/incidence ratio |
CS = clinical stage.
Figure 2Scatter plot comparing the Human Development Index and the percentage of clinical stage I cases selected by country. PA = Porto Alegre; SA = Saudi Arabia; SP = São Paulo.
Figure 3Survival according to the SEER study (blue) and a Brazilian Oncologic Hospital (HCB, green). (a) Overall survival (OS); (b) cancer-specific survival (SS); (c) overall survival selected by clinical stage (CS) at diagnosis. Unpublished Figure (ref 62) authorized by the Authors.