Jedy-Agba Elima, McCormack Valerie, Olaomi Oluwole, Badejo Wunmi, Yilkudi Monday, Yawe Terna, Ezeome Emmanuel, Salu Iliya, Miner Elijah, Anosike Ikechukwu, Adebamowo Sally N, Achusi Benjamin, Dos-Santos-Silva Isabel, Adebamowo Clement
Department of Non-communicable Disease Epidemiology, Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Section of Environment and Radiation, International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon, France.
Cancer Causes Control. 2017 Jul;28(7):685-697. doi: 10.1007/s10552-017-0894-y. Epub 2017 Apr 26.
Advanced stage at diagnosis is a common feature of breast cancer in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), contributing to poor survival rates. Understanding its determinants is key to preventing deaths from this cancer in SSA.
Within the Nigerian Integrative Epidemiology of Breast Cancer Study, a multicentred case-control study on breast cancer, we studied factors affecting stage at diagnosis of cases, i.e. women diagnosed with histologically confirmed invasive breast cancer between January 2014 and July 2016 at six secondary and tertiary hospitals in Nigeria. Stage was assessed using clinical and imaging methods. Ordinal logistic regression was used to examine associations of sociodemographic, breast cancer awareness, health care access and clinical factors with odds of later stage (I, II, III or IV) at diagnosis.
A total of 316 women were included, with a mean age (SD) of 45.4 (11.4) years. Of these, 94.9% had stage information: 5 (1.7%), 92 (30.7%), 157 (52.4%) and 46 (15.3%) were diagnosed at stages I, II, III and IV, respectively. In multivariate analyses, lower educational level (odds ratio (OR) 2.35, 95% confidence interval: 1.04, 5.29), not believing in a cure for breast cancer (1.81: 1.09, 3.01), and living in a rural area (2.18: 1.05, 4.51) were strongly associated with later stage, whilst age at diagnosis, tumour grade and oestrogen receptor status were not. Being Muslim (vs. Christian) was associated with lower odds of later stage disease (0.46: 0.22, 0.94).
Our findings suggest that factors that are amenable to intervention concerning breast cancer awareness and health care access, rather than intrinsic tumour characteristics, are the strongest determinants of stage at diagnosis in Nigerian women.
诊断时处于晚期是撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)乳腺癌的一个常见特征,这导致了生存率低下。了解其决定因素是预防SSA地区因这种癌症导致死亡的关键。
在尼日利亚乳腺癌综合流行病学研究中,一项关于乳腺癌的多中心病例对照研究,我们研究了影响病例诊断分期的因素,即2014年1月至2016年7月期间在尼日利亚六家二级和三级医院被组织学确诊为浸润性乳腺癌的女性。分期采用临床和影像学方法进行评估。使用有序逻辑回归来检验社会人口统计学、乳腺癌知晓情况、医疗保健可及性和临床因素与诊断时晚期(I、II、III或IV期)几率之间的关联。
共纳入316名女性,平均年龄(标准差)为45.4(11.4)岁。其中,94.9%有分期信息:分别有5例(1.7%)、92例(30.7%)、157例(52.4%)和46例(15.3%)在I、II、III和IV期被诊断。在多变量分析中,较低的教育水平(比值比(OR)2.35,95%置信区间:1.04,5.29)、不相信乳腺癌可治愈(1.81:1.09,3.01)以及生活在农村地区(2.18:1.05,4.51)与晚期密切相关,而诊断时的年龄、肿瘤分级和雌激素受体状态则不然。穆斯林(与基督教徒相比)与晚期疾病几率较低相关(0.46:0.22,0.94)。
我们的研究结果表明,在尼日利亚女性中,与乳腺癌知晓情况和医疗保健可及性相关的、易于干预的因素,而非肿瘤内在特征,是诊断分期的最强决定因素。