| Literature DB >> 30792811 |
Cynthia Villarreal-Garza1,2,3, Edna A Lopez-Martinez1,3, Jose Felipe Muñoz-Lozano1,3, Karla Unger-Saldaña4.
Abstract
The purpose of this review is to organise, summarise and critically assess existing knowledge on locally advanced breast cancer (LABC) among young women in Latin America. We discuss the most relevant findings in six sections: 1) epidemiology of breast cancer in young women in Latin America; 2) being young as a factor for worse prognosis; 3) LABC in young women in the region; 4) aggressive tumour behaviour among young women; 5) delays in diagnosis and treatment and 6) burden of advanced disease. We point out the need to dedicate resources to enhance earlier diagnosis and prompt referrals of young women with breast cancer; promote research regarding prevalence, biologic characteristics, outcomes and reasons for diagnosis and treatment delays for this age group; and finally, implement supportive care programmes as a means of improving patients and their families' well-being. The recognition of the current standpoint of breast cancer in young patients across the continent should shed some light on the importance of this pressing matter.Entities:
Keywords: Latin America; breast cancer; delay; locally advanced; young
Year: 2019 PMID: 30792811 PMCID: PMC6372300 DOI: 10.3332/ecancer.2019.894
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecancermedicalscience ISSN: 1754-6605
Figure 1.BC incidence by age group (15–39 versus ≥40 years) according to GLOBOCAN 2012 [4].
Studies addressing YWBC and LABC in Latin American countries.
| Country | Reference | Year | Main Focus | Number of patients | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bahamas | K Mungre, | 2016 | Retrospective observational sociodemographic description of BC in the Bahamas. | 270 |
The incidence of BC in women < 40 years in the Bahamas was 9% in the year 2009, 8% in 2010 and 12% in 2012. 95.5% of young patients presented with ≥ stage II BC. |
| Brazil | Abrahao Kde, | 2015 | Retrospective observational study to analyse the determinants of advanced stages in Brazilian women with BC. | 59,317 |
63% of young women < 40 years were diagnosed at advanced stages (IIB–IV). Younger age (18 to 49 years old) (odds ratio (OR) = 1.61 95% CI 1.51 to 1.72), having low educational level (OR = 1.53 95% CI 1.48 to 1.58), living in less developed geographical regions (OR = 1.27 95% CI 1.21 to 1.33), having invasive ductal carcinoma (OR = 2.70 95% CI 2.56 to 2.84) and invasive lobular carcinoma (OR = 2.63 95% CI 2.42 to 2.86) were associated with advanced BC. |
| Brazil | De Lima Vazquez, | 2016 | Retrospective, observational study that compares socio-demographic, clinical and pathological characteristics and their association with long-term survival between two random cohorts of young (≤40 years) and older (50–69 years) Brazilian patients with BC. | 1,735 |
Among young women ( The OS rates of the two age groups were similar except when analysed according to treatment period (1997–2002). Although patients aged ≤ 40 years harboured tumours with more aggressive clinicopathological characteristics, these were not independent predictors of OS. |
| Brazil | Rocha-Brischillari, | 2017 | Retrospective, observational study that analyses time trends in overall mortality from BC in Brazil, Brazilian regions and states. | 13,870 |
New cases of BC diagnosed in advanced stages continue to emerge in younger women. Trend: increased mortality in all regions of Brazil in women 20–49 years. |
| Brazil | Schneider IJ [ | 2009 | Retrospective study to analyse BC survival and associated factors based on a historical cohort of women with BC diagnosis from 2000 to 2002. | 1008 |
Overall 5-year survival was 76.2% (95% CI: 73.6–78.9). Independent factors associated with increased risk of death were age < 30 years (HR = 3.09; 95% CI: 1.25–7.67); illiteracy (HR = 3.70; 95% CI: 1.44–9.55) and stages III (HR = 5.27; 95% CI: 2.56–10.82) and IV (HR = 14.07; 95% CI: 6.81–29.06). Young women had the worst survival rates. |
| Chile | Acevedo Francisco, et al [ | 2015 | Retrospective study comparing BC in young patients and the elderly. | 2023 |
Incidence between ≤ 40 years and ≥ 70 years was, respectively: Stage I 18.8% versus 32.2%, Stage II 45% versus 40.1%, Stage III 31.3% versus 19.9% and Stage IV 5% versus 7.8%. The younger cohort had a higher incidence of triple negative (17.8% versus 11.7%) and Luminal B (43% versus 33.3%) BC. Young patients had a higher incidence of recurrence compared to the elderly (25.8 versus 11.7%). |
| Latin America | Villarreal-Garza, | 2013 | Systemic literature review of BC incidence and mortality among young women using data from the Globocan registry, and related clinical, pathological and survivorship aspects in this region. | Not available |
Incidence and mortality in women < 45 years in Latin American countries was 20% and 14% versus 12% and 7% in developed countries, respectively. Stage II and III disease, high histological grade and triple-negative and HER2 BC were features frequently observed among young Latin American BC patients. |
| Mexico | Villarreal-Garza C, | 2017 | Initial results of prospective YWBC cohort. | 243 |
98 patients were diagnosed at stage II (40.3%) and 92 at stage III (37.9%). Nine patients (4%) had developed distant recurrences and 12 patients (5%) had died as a consequence of BC, with a median follow-up of 17 months. |
| Mexico | Robles Castillo, | 2011 | Retrospective study that determined the frequency, sociodemographic, clinical and histopathological features of BC in women under 40 years attending a specialist breast unit in Mexico City. | 142 |
45.7% were diagnosed with the early disease (I and IIA), 47.89% of cases with locally advanced disease (IIB – IIIC) and 9% with metastatic disease (IV). A total of 13 recurrences were documented; 92% were in patients with locally advanced disease. |
| Mexico | Villarreal Garza, | 2013 | Retrospective study that described the frequency of BC among young Mexican patients, as well as their pathological characteristics at diagnosis and patterns of recurrence. | 320 |
67.5% diagnosed with locally advanced BC. From the non-metastatic patients at diagnosis, 31% developed recurrence (65% systemic, 21% loco regional and 14% both). After a median follow-up of 26 months, 18% of the 320 patients died secondary to BC disease progression. |
| Mexico | Villarreal-Garza, | 2015 | Retrospective study that compared the recurrence-free survival (RFS) among neoadjuvant-treated patients according to age and histologic subtypes. | 3,110 |
Young patients achieved higher pathologic complete response (PCR) rates (37% versus 25%), but the RFS interval was shorter at the expense of the hormone receptor-positive/HER2-negative subgroup. For patients with residual disease, young age remained a significant independent predictor of recurrence in patients with hormone receptor-positive/HER2-negative tumours but not in the HER2 positive and triple negative subtypes. |
| Mexico | Villarreal-Garza, et al [ | 2017 | Retrospective study of a single institution comparing clinical characteristics, treatment and survival between women ≤ 40 and > 40 years of age. Also, survival analyses were performed for each molecular subtype. | 4315 |
A total of 662 women (15.3%) were ≤ 40 years old. Among young women, 7.6% were diagnosed with stage I, 33.1% with stage II, 43.5% with stage III and 14.5 with stage IV. Younger women had more advanced disease, higher grade and a larger proportion of luminal B and triple-negative tumours (P < .001). At 5 years, both DFS and OS were lower in younger women, although there were no differences after adjusting for stage. Luminal B tumours showed a worse 5-year OS in younger women (79.1% versus 85.2%; P = .03). |
| Peru | Weibin Lian [ | 2017 | Descriptive, retrospective study that aims to compare clinicopathological and outcome characteristics according to patient age at diagnosis and menopausal status. | 1024 |
Stage III was higher in the pre versus postmenopausal group (33.7% versus 26.8%). Premenopausal women had a lower incidence of stage II disease (48.7% versus 57.6%). |
Figure 2.BC stages at diagnosis in selected countries in Latin America [16, 17, 23], USA [26] and New Zealand [27].
Health system intervals reported for Latin American countries.
| Reference | n | Median patient age | Health services interval measured | Median interval | % LABC patients |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rezende, 2009 [ | 104 | 54 | Diagnostic interval | 6.5 mo | 37.5% II & III |
| Barros, 2013 [ | 250 | 52 | Health system interval | 5.2 mo | 74.5% II & III |
| Piñeros, 2011 [ | 1106 | 53.1 | Diagnostic interval | 3 mo | 45% LABC |
| Health system interval | 4.6 mo | ||||
| Bright, 2011 [ | 32 | 53 | Diagnostic interval | 6.6 mo | 70% LABC |
| Unger-Saldaña, 2015 [ | 597 | 51 | Diagnostic interval | 4.2 mo | 67% II & III |
| Angeles-Llerenas, 2016 [ | 854 | 52 | Mammography result to treatment | 2.2 mo | 79.8% II & III |