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国家卫生系统特点、诊断时的乳腺癌分期与乳腺癌死亡率:基于人群的分析。

National health system characteristics, breast cancer stage at diagnosis, and breast cancer mortality: a population-based analysis.

机构信息

Breast Health Global Initiative, Public Health Sciences, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA, USA.

World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland; Department of Oncology and Hemato-Oncology, University of Milan, Milan, Italy; European Institute of Oncology, IRCCS, Milan, Italy.

出版信息

Lancet Oncol. 2021 Nov;22(11):1632-1642. doi: 10.1016/S1470-2045(21)00462-9. Epub 2021 Oct 13.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

In some countries, breast cancer age-standardised mortality rates have decreased by 2-4% per year since the 1990s, but others have yet to achieve this outcome. In this study, we aimed to characterise the associations between national health system characteristics and breast cancer age-standardised mortality rate, and the degree of breast cancer downstaging correlating with national age-standardised mortality rate reductions.

METHODS

In this population-based study, national age-standardised mortality rate estimates for women aged 69 years or younger obtained from GLOBOCAN 2020 were correlated with a broad panel of standardised national health system data as reported in the WHO Cancer Country Profiles 2020. These health system characteristics include health expenditure, the Universal Health Coverage Service Coverage Index (UHC Index), dedicated funding for early detection programmes, breast cancer early detection guidelines, referral systems, cancer plans, number of dedicated public and private cancer centres per 10 000 patients with cancer, and pathology services. We tested for differences between continuous variables using the non-parametric Kruskal-Wallis test, and for categorical variables using the Pearson χ test. Simple and multiple linear regression analyses were fitted to identify associations between health system characteristics and age-standardised breast cancer mortality rates. Data on TNM stage at diagnosis were obtained from national or subnational cancer registries, supplemented by a literature review of PubMed from 2010 to 2020. Mortality trends from 1950 to 2016 were assessed using the WHO Cancer Mortality Database. The threshold for significance was set at a p value of 0·05 or less.

FINDINGS

148 countries had complete health system data. The following variables were significantly higher in high-income countries than in low-income countries in unadjusted analyses: health expenditure (p=0·0002), UHC Index (p<0·0001), dedicated funding for early detection programmes (p=0·0020), breast cancer early detection guidelines (p<0·0001), breast cancer referral systems (p=0·0030), national cancer plans (p=0·014), cervical cancer early detection programmes (p=0·0010), number of dedicated public (p<0·0001) and private (p=0·027) cancer centres per 10 000 patients with cancer, and pathology services (p<0·0001). In adjusted multivariable regression analyses in 141 countries, two health system characteristics were significantly associated with lower age-standardised mortality rates: higher UHC Index levels (β=-0·12, 95% CI -0·16 to -0·08) and increasing numbers of public cancer centres (β=-0·23, -0·36 to -0·10). These findings indicate that each unit increase in the UHC Index was associated with a 0·12-unit decline in age-standardised mortality rates, and each additional public cancer centre per 10 000 patients with cancer was associated with a 0·23-unit decline in age-standardised mortality rate. Among 35 countries with available breast cancer TNM staging data, all 20 that achieved sustained mean reductions in age-standardised mortality rate of 2% or more per year for at least 3 consecutive years since 1990 had at least 60% of patients with invasive breast cancer presenting as stage I or II disease. Some countries achieved this reduction without most women having access to population-based mammographic screening.

INTERPRETATION

Countries with low breast cancer mortality rates are characterised by increased levels of coverage of essential health services and higher numbers of public cancer centres. Among countries achieving sustained mortality reductions, the majority of breast cancers are diagnosed at an early stage, reinforcing the value of clinical early diagnosis programmes for improving breast cancer outcomes.

FUNDING

None.

摘要

背景

自 20 世纪 90 年代以来,一些国家的乳腺癌年龄标准化死亡率每年下降 2-4%,但其他国家尚未实现这一结果。在这项研究中,我们旨在描述国家卫生系统特征与乳腺癌年龄标准化死亡率之间的关联,以及与国家年龄标准化死亡率降低相关的乳腺癌降期程度。

方法

在这项基于人群的研究中,从 GLOBOCAN 2020 获得的 69 岁或以下女性的国家年龄标准化死亡率估计数与 WHO 癌症国家概况 2020 中报告的广泛标准化国家卫生系统数据进行了相关分析。这些卫生系统特征包括卫生支出、全民健康覆盖服务覆盖指数(UHC 指数)、早期检测计划的专项资金、乳腺癌早期检测指南、转诊系统、癌症计划、每 10000 名癌症患者的公共和私人癌症中心数量以及病理服务。我们使用非参数 Kruskal-Wallis 检验比较了连续变量之间的差异,使用 Pearson χ 检验比较了分类变量之间的差异。拟合简单和多元线性回归分析,以确定卫生系统特征与年龄标准化乳腺癌死亡率之间的关联。从国家或次国家癌症登记处获得 TNM 分期数据,并通过 2010 年至 2020 年 PubMed 的文献综述进行补充。使用世界卫生组织癌症死亡率数据库评估 1950 年至 2016 年的死亡率趋势。显著性阈值设定为 p 值<0.05。

结果

有 148 个国家有完整的卫生系统数据。在未调整分析中,高收入国家的以下变量明显高于低收入国家:卫生支出(p=0.0002)、UHC 指数(p<0.0001)、早期检测计划的专项资金(p=0.0020)、乳腺癌早期检测指南(p<0.0001)、乳腺癌转诊系统(p=0.0030)、国家癌症计划(p=0.014)、宫颈癌早期检测计划(p=0.0010)、每 10000 名癌症患者的公共(p<0.0001)和私人(p=0.027)癌症中心数量以及病理服务(p<0.0001)。在 141 个国家的调整后的多元回归分析中,有两个卫生系统特征与较低的年龄标准化死亡率显著相关:较高的 UHC 指数水平(β=-0.12,95%CI -0.16 至 -0.08)和公共癌症中心数量的增加(β=-0.23,-0.36 至 -0.10)。这些发现表明,UHC 指数每增加一个单位,年龄标准化死亡率就会下降 0.12 个单位,每增加 10000 名癌症患者中的一个公共癌症中心,年龄标准化死亡率就会下降 0.23 个单位。在 35 个有乳腺癌 TNM 分期数据的国家中,所有 20 个自 1990 年以来至少连续 3 年每年平均年龄标准化死亡率降低 2%或更多的国家,侵袭性乳腺癌患者中至少有 60%为 I 期或 II 期疾病。一些国家在大多数妇女没有接受基于人群的乳房 X 线筛查的情况下实现了这一降低。

解释

乳腺癌死亡率较低的国家的特点是基本卫生服务的覆盖率增加,以及公共癌症中心的数量增加。在实现持续死亡率降低的国家中,大多数乳腺癌在早期被诊断出来,这加强了临床早期诊断计划在改善乳腺癌结果方面的价值。

资金

无。

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