King's College London, Division of Cancer Studies, Thames Cancer Registry, London, United Kingdom.
Int J Cancer. 2010 Dec 1;127(11):2630-8. doi: 10.1002/ijc.25264.
Several international studies have found that survival from breast cancer is lower in the United Kingdom than in some other European countries. We have compared breast cancer survival between the national populations of England, Norway and Sweden, with a view to identifying subsets of patients with particularly good or adverse survival outcomes. We extracted cases of breast cancer in women diagnosed 1996-2004 from the national cancer registries of the 3 countries. The study comprised 303,657 English cases, 24,919 Norwegian cases and 57,512 cases from Sweden. Follow-up was in 2001-2004. The main outcome measures were 5-year cumulative relative survival and excess death rates, stratified by age and period of follow-up. In comparison with Norway and Sweden, the excess mortality in England was particularly pronounced in the first month and in the first year after diagnosis, and generally more marked in the oldest age groups. Compared with Norwegian patients, 81% of the excess deaths in the English patients occurred in the first 2 years after diagnosis. Our findings emphasise the importance of awareness of symptoms and early detection as the main strategy to improve breast cancer survival in the United Kingdom.
几项国际研究发现,英国的乳腺癌生存率低于一些其他欧洲国家。我们比较了英格兰、挪威和瑞典三国的全国人口的乳腺癌生存率,旨在确定具有特别良好或不良生存结果的患者亚组。我们从这 3 个国家的国家癌症登记处提取了 1996-2004 年确诊的女性乳腺癌病例。该研究包括 303657 例英国病例、24919 例挪威病例和 57512 例瑞典病例。随访时间为 2001-2004 年。主要观察指标是按年龄和随访时间分层的 5 年累积相对生存率和超额死亡率。与挪威和瑞典相比,英格兰的超额死亡率在诊断后第一个月和第一年尤为明显,并且在最年长的年龄组中更为明显。与挪威患者相比,81%的英国患者的超额死亡发生在诊断后 2 年内。我们的研究结果强调了认识症状和早期发现作为提高英国乳腺癌生存率的主要策略的重要性。