Breast cancer characteristics and pathological prognostic determinants in indigenous Australians: Retrospective cohort study in the Northern Territory

Author:

Mencel Justin12ORCID,Hong Hooi Wen2,Charakidis Michail1,Pokorny Adrian1,Aldridge Emily3,Karanth Narayan1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Oncology The Royal Darwin Hospital Darwin Northern Territory Australia

2. Department of Medical Oncology The Lyell McEwin Hospital Adelaide South Australia Australia

3. Department of Medicine University of Adelaide Adelaide South Australia Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThere is a disparity in health outcomes between indigenous and nonindigenous Australians, with higher chronic disease burden and shorter life expectancy in this minority population. Although rates of breast cancer among indigenous women are lower than nonindigenous women, they face a higher breast cancer‐associated mortality, which may not entirely be explained by socio‐economic disadvantage.MethodsThis retrospective cohort study investigated previously described pathologic prognostic factors in indigenous Australians in the Northern Territory.ResultsData analyzed confirmed that indigenous women were more likely to have poorer prognostic disease features, including ER/PR negative and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 amplified tumors, larger tumors, and higher stage disease.ConclusionThese pathologic features portend to a poor prognosis, raising the possibility these factors contribute to the disparity in health outcomes between indigenous and nonindigenous women with breast cancer, in addition to known socio‐economic factors.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Oncology,General Medicine

Reference14 articles.

1. Cancer in Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander people of Australia;Australian Institute of Health and Welfare;Breast Cancer (in females) (C50),2018

2. The descriptive epidemiology of female breast cancer: An international comparison of screening, incidence, survival and mortality

3. Breast cancer in australian indigenous women: incidence, mortality, and risk factors;Tapia KA;Asian Pacific J Cancer Prev,2017

4. Breast Screening and Breast Cancer Survival in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Women of Australia

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