Davis Kimberley J, Campbell Chantal, Costelloe Rebekah, Song Ting, Fylyk Glaucia, Yu Ping, Craig Steven J
Research Operations, Illawarra Shoalhaven Local Health District, Wollongong, NSW, Australia.
Graduate School of Medicine, Faculty of Science Medicine and Health, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, NSW, Australia.
Breast J. 2024 Jun 19;2024:9354395. doi: 10.1155/2024/9354395. eCollection 2024.
Breast cancer management is complex, requiring personalised care from multidisciplinary teams. Research shows that there is unwarranted clinical variation in mastectomy rates between rural and metropolitan patients; that is, variation in treatment which cannot be explained by disease progression or medical necessity. This study aims to determine the clinical and nonclinical factors contributing to any unwarranted variation in breast cancer management in rural patients and to evaluate how these factors and variations relate to patient outcomes.
Comprehensive data from patients who had primary breast cancer surgery from 2010 to 2014 in either a rural or metropolitan location in a single local health district was analysed ( = 686). Records were subset into two rurality groupings based on the postcode in which the patient resided, and the Modified Monash Model (MMM), an Australian system for classifying rurality. Statistical analysis was used to compare rural and metropolitan cohorts on treatments, patient characteristics, timeliness, and outcomes (recurrence and survival).
Rural patients had higher mastectomy rates than metropolitan patients (57% vs. 34%, < 0.001), despite a lack of difference in clinical or demographic factors accounting for such variation. The length of time between treatment pathway stages was consistently longer amongst rural patients ( < 0.01). Rural women also had worse survival outcomes, especially amongst HER2-positive patients who had significantly lower survival (5-year 74% vs 82%; 10-year 49% vs 71%, < 0.05) than metropolitan HER2-positive patients.
This study reveals clinical disparities among rural breast cancer patients, that cannot be explained by demographic and clinical factors alone. Rural patients face lower rates of breast-conserving surgery and treatment delays, attributable to systemic barriers such as limited access to specialist care, high travel costs, and suboptimal care coordination. These findings have important implications for improving equity and collaboration in delivering person-centred breast cancer care.
乳腺癌的治疗十分复杂,需要多学科团队提供个性化护理。研究表明,农村和城市患者在乳房切除术率方面存在不必要的临床差异;也就是说,这种治疗差异无法用疾病进展或医疗必要性来解释。本研究旨在确定导致农村患者乳腺癌治疗中出现任何不必要差异的临床和非临床因素,并评估这些因素及差异与患者预后的关系。
分析了2010年至2014年在单一地方卫生区的农村或城市地区接受原发性乳腺癌手术的患者的综合数据(n = 686)。根据患者居住的邮政编码以及澳大利亚农村分类系统改良莫纳什模型(MMM),将记录分为两个农村分组。采用统计分析方法比较农村和城市队列在治疗、患者特征、及时性和预后(复发和生存)方面的情况。
尽管在解释这种差异的临床或人口统计学因素方面没有差异,但农村患者的乳房切除术率高于城市患者(57%对34%,P < 0.001)。农村患者在治疗路径各阶段之间的时间间隔始终较长(P < 0.01)。农村女性的生存预后也较差,尤其是HER2阳性患者,其生存率明显低于城市HER2阳性患者(5年生存率74%对82%;10年生存率49%对71%,P < 0.05)。
本研究揭示了农村乳腺癌患者之间的临床差异,而这不能仅由人口统计学和临床因素来解释。农村患者面临保乳手术率较低和治疗延迟的问题,这归因于系统性障碍,如获得专科护理的机会有限、交通成本高以及护理协调不佳。这些发现对改善以患者为中心的乳腺癌护理中的公平性与协作具有重要意义。