Taylor Richard, Davis Philip, Boyages John
NSW Breast Cancer Institute, University of Sydney, Westmead Hospital, PO Box 143, Westmead, NSW 2145, Australia.
Eur J Cancer. 2003 Jan;39(2):215-22. doi: 10.1016/s0959-8049(02)00486-0.
Several long-term studies of breast cancer survival have shown continued excess mortality from breast cancer up to 20-40 years following treatment. The purpose of this report was to investigate temporal trends in long-term survival from breast cancer in all New South Wales (NSW) women. Breast cancer cases incident in 1972-1996 (54,228) were derived from the NSW Central Cancer Registry-a population-based registry which began in 1972. All cases of breast cancer not known to be dead were matched against death records. The expected survival for NSW women was derived from published annual life tables. Relative survival analysis compared the survival of cancer cases with the age, sex and period matched mortality of the total population. Cases were considered alive at the end of 1996, except when known to be dead. Proportional hazards regression was employed to model survival on age, period and degree of spread at diagnosis. Survival at 5, 10, 15, 20 and 25 years of follow-up was 76 per cent, 65 per cent, 60 per cent, 57 per cent and 56 per cent. The annual hazard rate for excess mortality was 4.3 per cent in year 1, maximal at 6.5 per cent in year 3, declining to 4.7 per cent in year 5, 2.7 per cent in year 10, 1.4 per cent in year 15, 1.0 per cent for years 16-20, and 0.4 per cent for years 20-25 of follow-up. Relative survival was highest in 40-49 year-olds. Cases diagnosed most recently (1992-1996) had the highest survival, compared with cases diagnosed in previous periods. Five-year survival improved over time, especially from the late 1980s for women in the screening age group (50-69 years). Survival was highest for those with localised cancer at diagnosis: 88.4 per cent, 79.1 per cent, 74.6 per cent, 72.7 per cent and 72.8 per cent at 5, 10, 15, 20 and 25 years follow-up (excluding those aged >or=70 years). There was no significant difference between the survival of the breast cancer cases and the general population at 20-25 years follow-up. Degree of spread was less predictive of survival 5-20 years after diagnosis, compared with 0-5 years after diagnosis, and was not significant at 20-25 years of follow-up. Relative survival from breast cancer in NSW women continues to decrease to 25 years after diagnosis, but there is little excess mortality after 15 years follow-up, especially for those with localised cancer at diagnosis, and the minimal excess mortality at 20-25 years of follow-up is not statistically significant.
多项乳腺癌生存的长期研究表明,在治疗后的20至40年里,乳腺癌导致的额外死亡率持续存在。本报告的目的是调查新南威尔士州(NSW)所有女性乳腺癌长期生存的时间趋势。1972 - 1996年确诊的乳腺癌病例(54,228例)来自新南威尔士州中央癌症登记处——一个始于1972年的基于人群的登记处。所有未知死亡的乳腺癌病例均与死亡记录进行匹配。新南威尔士州女性的预期生存情况来自已发表的年度生命表。相对生存分析将癌症病例的生存情况与年龄、性别和时期匹配的总人口死亡率进行比较。除已知死亡外,病例在1996年底被视为存活。采用比例风险回归模型来分析年龄、时期和诊断时的扩散程度对生存的影响。随访5年、10年、15年、20年和25年的生存率分别为76%、65%、60%、57%和56%。第1年额外死亡率的年度风险率为4.3%,第3年最高达到6.5%,第5年降至4.7%,第10年为2.7%,第15年为1.4%,随访第16 - 20年为1.0%,第20 - 25年为0.4%。40 - 49岁女性的相对生存率最高。与之前各时期确诊的病例相比,最近(1992 - 1996年)确诊的病例生存率最高。5年生存率随时间有所提高,尤其是2世纪80年代后期筛查年龄组(50 - 69岁)的女性。诊断时为局限性癌症的患者生存率最高:随访5年、10年、15年、20年和25年时分别为88.4%、79.1%、74.6%、7乙7%和72.8%(不包括年龄≥70岁的患者)。随访20 - 25年时,乳腺癌病例的生存率与一般人群之间无显著差异。与诊断后0 - 5年相比,诊断后5 - 20年扩散程度对生存的预测性较低,且随访20 - 25年时无显著意义。新南威尔士州女性乳腺癌的相对生存率在诊断后25年持续下降,但随访15年后额外死亡率较低,尤其是诊断时为局限性癌症的患者,随访20 - 25年时最低的额外死亡率无统计学意义。