Brooke Hannah L, Ringbäck Weitoft Gunilla, Talbäck Mats, Feychting Maria, Ljung Rickard
Unit of Epidemiology, Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
The National Board of Health and Welfare, Stockholm, Sweden.
BMJ Open. 2017 Mar 30;7(3):e014968. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-014968.
Socioeconomic inequalities in survival after breast cancer persist worldwide. We aim to determine whether adult offspring's socioeconomic resources contribute to inequalities in mothers' survival after breast cancer.
14 231 women, aged 65-79 years, with a child aged ≥30 years and a first primary diagnosis of breast cancer in the National Cancer Register between 2001 and 2010 were followed until death, 10 years after diagnosis, or end of study (December 2015). Relative survival proportions and excess mortality within 10 years of diagnosis by strata of offspring's education level and disposable income were estimated using flexible parametric models accounting for measures of mothers' socioeconomic position and expected mortality in the general population.
4292 women died during 102 236 person-years of follow-up. Crude 10-year relative survival proportions for mothers of children with >14, 12-14 and <12 years of education were 0.89 (0.87 to 0.91), 0.87 (0.85 to 0.89) and 0.79 (0.76 to 0.81), respectively. Compared with mothers of children with >14 years of education, mothers of children with <12 or 12-14 years of education had substantially higher excess mortality (excess HR 1.69 (1.38 to 2.07) and 1.22 (1.00 to 1.48), respectively). Higher mortality did not differ between tertiles of offspring's disposable income.
Adult offspring's education level may contribute to inequalities in mothers' survival after breast cancer. Clinicians should be aware of the educational context beyond the individual and women with less educated offsprings may require extra support. This should be considered in future research, policy frameworks and interventions aimed at reducing survival inequalities.
乳腺癌患者生存方面的社会经济不平等在全球范围内持续存在。我们旨在确定成年子女的社会经济资源是否会导致母亲患乳腺癌后生存的不平等。
对14231名年龄在65 - 79岁之间、有年龄≥30岁子女且在2001年至2010年期间在国家癌症登记处首次被确诊为原发性乳腺癌的女性进行随访,直至死亡、确诊后10年或研究结束(2015年12月)。使用灵活的参数模型,在考虑母亲社会经济地位指标和一般人群预期死亡率的情况下,估计按子女教育水平和可支配收入分层的确诊后10年内的相对生存比例和超额死亡率。
在102236人年的随访期间,4292名女性死亡。子女受教育年限>14年、12 - 14年和<12年的母亲,其10年粗相对生存比例分别为0.89(0.87至0.91)、0.87(0.85至0.89)和0.79(0.76至0.81)。与子女受教育年限>14年的母亲相比,子女受教育年限<12年或12 - 14年的母亲超额死亡率显著更高(超额风险比分别为1.69(1.38至2.07)和1.22(1.00至1.48))。子女可支配收入三分位数之间的死亡率没有差异。
成年子女的教育水平可能导致母亲患乳腺癌后生存的不平等。临床医生应意识到个体之外的教育背景,子女受教育程度较低的女性可能需要额外支持。在未来旨在减少生存不平等的研究、政策框架和干预措施中应考虑这一点。