| Literature DB >> 29197354 |
Elizabeth T Thomas1, Chris Del Mar2, Paul Glasziou2, Gordon Wright1, Alexandra Barratt3, Katy J L Bell4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Autopsy studies demonstrate the prevalence pool of incidental breast cancer in the population, but estimates are uncertain due to small numbers in any primary study. We aimed to conduct a systematic review of autopsy studies to estimate the prevalence of incidental breast cancer and precursors.Entities:
Keywords: Autopsy; Breast neoplasms; Early detection of cancer; Mass screening
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29197354 PMCID: PMC5712106 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-017-3808-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Search and selection of primary studies for the meta-analysis
Estimated prevalence of incidental breast cancer and precursor lesions by year of autopsies done and thoroughness of examination in the 13 included studies
| Author | Median year autopsies done | Country/Ethnicity | Number of women | Age (range, years) | Study Population | Peer Review | Used international pathology reporting method | Detected breast cancer possibly caused woman’s death? | Mean number of sections submitted for pathology | Invasive Cancera | In-situ cancer (DCISb/LCIS)c | Atypical Hyperplasia (ADHd/ALH)e | All categories of Cancer or Precursor lesiona | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Forensic vs Hospital | Consecutive | |||||||||||||
| Kiaer | 1948 | Denmark | 351 | 51 | Forensic | No | No | No | No | Not available | 0·3% | 0·0% | 0·0% | 0·3% |
| (16–89) | ||||||||||||||
| Ryan | 1962 | Canada | 100 | 56 | Hospital | No | Yes | No | Not available | 7 | 0·0% | 0·0% | 3·0% | 3·0% |
| Sarnelli | 1962 | Italy | 100 | 62 | Hospital | No | No | Yes | No | Not available | 0·0% | 0·0% | 0·0% | 0·0% |
| (46–90) | ||||||||||||||
| Kramer | 1973 | USA | 70 | 79 | Hospital | No | No | No | Not available | 100 | 1·4% | 4·3% | 10·0% | 15·7% |
| (70 –?) | ||||||||||||||
| Nielsen 1984 | 1977 | Denmark | 75 | 67 | Hospital | Yes | No | Yes: WHO (1981), Azzopardi | No | 189 | 1·3% | 18·7% | 4·0% | 26·6% |
| (22–89) | ||||||||||||||
| Bartow | 1981 | USA | 519 | 43 | Forensic | Yes | No | No | No | 18 | 1·0% | 0·4% | 1·0% | 2·3% |
| (15–88) | ||||||||||||||
| Nielsen 1987 | 1984 | Denmark | 109 | 39 | Forensic | Yes | No | Yes: WHO (1981), Azzopardi | No | 549 | 0·9% | 18·3% | 7·3% | 26·6% |
| (20–54) | ||||||||||||||
| Alpers | 1985 | USA | 101 | 51 | Hospital | No | No | No | No | 253 | 0·0% | 8·9% | 10·9% | 19·8% |
| (15–99) | ||||||||||||||
| Pisano | 1985 | Chile | 152 | 44 | Forensic | No | Yes | Yes | No | 3 | 0·7% | 0·0% | 0·0% | 0·7% |
| Bhathal | 1985 | Australia | 207 | 60 | Forensic | Yes | No | Yes: Black & de Chabon | No | 23 | 1·4% | 13·0% | 12·6% | 27·1% |
| (15–97) | ||||||||||||||
| Giarelli | 1985 | Italy | 463 | 77 | Hospital | Yes | No | No | No | Not available | 1·5% | 0·0% | 0·0% | 1·5% |
| (35 –?) | ||||||||||||||
| Inai | 1985 | Japan | 62 | 55 | Hospital | No | No | Yes: Azzopardi | No | 36 | 1·6% | 0·0% | 14·5% | 16·1% |
| (11–85) | ||||||||||||||
| Starlsberg (Ghana)f | 2010 | 39 | Hospital | No | Yes | No | Yes | 8 | 7·1% | 0·0% | 0·0% | 7·1% | ||
| Ghana | 28 | (15–60) | ||||||||||||
| Starlsberg (Norway)f | 2010 | 42 | Hospital | No | Yes | No | Yes | 8 | 3·8% | 0·0% | 3·8% | 7·7% | ||
| Norway | 26 | (15–60) | ||||||||||||
aPrevalences may differ to those reported in primary studies due to exclusion of cases which may have been diagnosed during life
b DCIS Ductal carcinoma in-situ
c LCIS Lobular Carcinoma in-situ
d ADH Atypical Ductal Hyperplasia
e ALH Atypical Lobular Hyperplasia
fIn Stalsberg study, two women with invasive breast cancer first diagnosed at autopsy died of cardiac tamponade/massive pleural effusion and metastatic signet cell carcinoma (the women were from Ghana and Norway respectively)
Fig. 2Prevalence of incidental breast cancer or neoplastic precursor lesions in studies by median year of autopsies. 2a: Cancer or precursor lesion 2b: Invasive cancer 2c: In-situ cancer 2d: Atypical Hyperplasia. Data points are proportional to total number of women in each study and are numbered according to year of study as follows: 1: Kiaer [26], 2: Ryan [27]; 3: Sarnelli [28]; 4: Kramer [29]; 5: Nielsen 1984 [30]; 6: Bartow [31]; 7: Nielsen 1987 [32]; 8: Alpers [33]; 9: Pisano [34]; 10: Bhathal [35]; 11: Giarelli [36]; 12: Inai [37]; 13: Stalsberg (Ghana) [25]; 14: Stalsberg (Norway) [25]
Estimates of association (from logistic regression model) of potential predictors for prevalence of breast cancer or precursor lesion
| Possible Predictor | Invasive Cancer | In-situ cancer (DCISa + LCISb) | Atypical Hyperplasia (ADHc + ALHd) | All categories | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
| Mean number of histologic sections examined per woman | 0·75 |
|
|
| ||||
| per unit on logscale | 0.9 (0.7–1.3) |
|
|
| ||||
| > 20 sections taken on average | 1·1 (0·5–2·7) |
|
|
| ||||
| Mean age | 0·48 | 0·75 | 1·0 | 1·00 | ||||
| per decade increase | 1.1 (0.8–1.5) | 1·3 (0·34–5·30) | 1·1 (0·4–2·7) | 1·07 (0·53–2·1) | ||||
| Mean age > 50 | 0·8 (0·3–1.7) | 1·9 (0·03–105.1) | 2·2 (0·2–25·7) | 1·24 (0·08–7·9) | ||||
| Mean age > 70 | 1.7 (0.7–4.1) | 0·6 (0·003–4·6) | 0·5 (0·02–13·1) | 0·91 (0·08–2·4) | ||||
| Forensic vs hospital based | 0.6 (0.3–1.4) | 0.27 | 2·8 (0·05–168.0) | 0·53 | 0·5 (0·05–5·7) | 0·65 | 0·60 (0·10–3·7) | 0·58 |
| Consecutive cases | 1.8 (0.7–4.3) | 0.19 | 37·7 (0·5–2777.0) | 0·06 | 1·5 (0·1–16·3) | 1·0 | 2·3 (0·48–11·2) | 0·32 |
| Adjusted for number of sections examined | 4·5 (0·77–26·3) | 0·11 | ||||||
| Breast cancer may have caused death |
|
| 0·0 (0·0-∞) | 0·21 | 0·5 (0·0–23·1) | 0·75 | 1·2 (0·1–17·1) | 1·00 |
| Peer Review | 1·4 (0·5–4.0) | 0.58 | 0·33 (0·04–2·5) | 0·29 | 0·3 (0·02–4·3) | 0·44 | 0·39 (0·06–2·8) | 0·37 |
| Internationally recognized reporting method? | 1.0 (0.4–2.3) | 1.0 | 8·6 (0·26–288) | 0·37 | 8·6 (0·26–288) | 0·37 | 2·3 (0·42–12·4) | 0·37 |
| Time trend (decade of autopsies) | 1·0 (0·5–2·0) | 1·0 | 1·0 (0·2–4·4) | 0·65 | 1·4 (0·7–3·0) | 0·40 | 1·6 (0·93–2·7) | 0·09 |
| Adjusted for number of sections examined | 1·2 (0·81–2·5) | 0·37 | ||||||
*P value <0·05
a DCIS Ductal carcinoma in-situ
b LCIS Lobular Carcinoma in-situ
c ADH Atypical Ductal Hyperplasia
d ALH Atypical Lobular Hyperplasia
Fig. 3Prevalence of incidental breast cancer or neoplastic precursor lesion in studies by thoroughness of pathology examination. 3a: Invasive cancer 3b: In-situ cancer 3c: Atypical Hyperplasia. Data points are proportional to total number of women in each study and are numbered according to year of study as follows: 1: Kiaer [26], 2: Ryan [27]; 3: Sarnelli [28]; 4: Kramer [29]; 5: Nielsen 1984 [30]; 6: Bartow [31]; 7: Nielsen 1987 [32]; 8: Alpers [33]; 9: Pisano [34]; 10: Bhathal [35]; 11: Giarelli [36]; 12: Inai [37]; 13: Stalsberg (Ghana) [25]; 14: Stalsberg (Norway) [25]