| Literature DB >> 35864141 |
Yi-Chu Chen1, Shih-Yung Su1,2, Jing-Rong Jhuang1,3, Chun-Ju Chiang1,3, Ya-Wen Yang3, Chao-Chun Wu4, Li-Ju Lin4, Wen-Chung Lee5,6,7.
Abstract
Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women in Taiwan. The age-standardized incidence rate has doubled in just 20 years, causing considerable concern to health professionals and the general public. This study used an ensemble of age-period-cohort models to estimate breast cancer incidence trends in Taiwan from 1997 to 2016 and project trends up to 2035. The (truncated) world standard population (World Health Organization 2000) proportions (age groups: 25-29, 30-34, …, 80-84, and older than 85 years) were used to calculate age-standardized incidence rates. The age-standardized incidence rate from 1997 (60.33/100,000 population) to 2016 (128.20/100,000 population) increased rapidly. The projection is that the increase in the age-standardized incidence will subsequently slow and exhibit a plateau in 2031 (151.32/100,000 population). From 2026 to 2035, the age-specific incidence rates for women older than 55 years old (postmenopausal breast cancer) are projected to increase with larger percentage increments for older women. A future leveling of female breast cancer incidence trends in Taiwan is anticipated. The majority of the patients with breast cancer in the future will be women aged 55 years and older. Education on lifestyle recommendations and mammography screening is required to reduce the burden of breast cancer. The results should have implications for other countries which are also confronted with the same public health problem of rapidly increasing breast cancer incidences.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35864141 PMCID: PMC9304355 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-16056-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Age-standardized and age-specific breast cancer incidence rates per 100,000 population (the observed rates in 2016 and the projected rates in 2025 and 2035) and the projected percentage changes from 2016 to 2025 and 2026 to 2035.
| Incidence rate in 2016 | Case number in 2016 | Projected incidence rate in 2025 (projected percentage change from 2016 to 2025) | Projected case number in 2025 | Projected incidence rate in 2035 (projected percentage change from 2026 to 2035) | Projected case number in 2035 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age-standardizeda | 128.20 | 148.25 (15.64%) | 149.45 (0.81%) | |||
| Age 25–29 | 9.48 | 73 | 9.99 (5.36%) | 72.1 | 8.52 (− 14.71%) | 40.1 |
| Age 30–34 | 30.62 | 282 | 31.55 (3.02%) | 247.3 | 27.64 (− 12.39%) | 156.8 |
| Age 35–39 | 70.24 | 719 | 76.11 (8.35%) | 595.7 | 68.53 (− 9.96%) | 505.5 |
| Age 40–44 | 138.52 | 1270 | 150.36 (8.55%) | 1434.6 | 139.33 (− 7.34%) | 1100.8 |
| Age 45–49 | 215.98 | 1992 | 217.55 (0.73%) | 2218.8 | 207.68 (− 4.54%) | 1621.6 |
| Age 50–54 | 206.75 | 1956 | 244.90 (18.45%) | 2187.8 | 241.13 (− 1.54%) | 2276.6 |
| Age 55–59 | 205.70 | 1832 | 251.68 (22.36%) | 2287.9 | 255.58 (1.55%) | 2564.2 |
| Age 60–64 | 218.58 | 1732 | 259.51 (18.73%) | 2383.0 | 272.66 (5.07%) | 2378.0 |
| Age 65–69 | 212.47 | 1163 | 259.81 (22.28%) | 2197.6 | 282.40 (8.69%) | 2472.5 |
| Age 70–74 | 163.63 | 587 | 236.01 (44.23%) | 1704.6 | 265.64 (12.55%) | 2281.1 |
| Age 75–79 | 168.47 | 536 | 205.05 (21.71%) | 904.1 | 239.19 (16.65%) | 1783.5 |
| Age 80–84 | 140.55 | 305 | 199.31 (41.81%) | 547.3 | 241.15 (20.99%) | 1379.5 |
| Age 85 + | 111.23 | 205 | 160.06 (43.91%) | 480.7 | 201.03 (25.60%) | 920.2 |
aThe World Health Organization’s 2000 world standard populations were used to compute the truncated age-standardized incidence rate (age range 25 + years).
Figure 1Age-standardized breast cancer incidence rate from 1997 to 2016 and projection from 2017 to 2035. The World Health Organization’s 2000 World Standard Populations were used to compute the truncated age-standardized incidence rate (age range 25 + years). Dotted lines indicate 95% confidence intervals for the projections.
Figure 2Age-specific breast cancer incidence rate from 1997 to 2016 and projections from 2017 to 2035 for calendar year and birth cohort.