Decline in the Incidence of Distant Recurrence of Breast Cancer: a Population-Based Health Record Linkage Study, Australia 2001–2016.

Author:

Lord Sarah J.123ORCID,Daniels Benjamin34ORCID,O'Connell Dianne L.56ORCID,Kiely Belinda E.1ORCID,Beith Jane7ORCID,Smith Andrea L.5ORCID,Pearson Sallie-Anne34ORCID,Chiew Kim-Lin8ORCID,Bulsara Max K.9ORCID,Houssami Nehmat510ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 1The National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Clinical Trials Centre, The University of Sydney, Camperdown, Australia.

2. 2The School of Medicine, University of Notre Dame Australia, Darlinghurst, Australia.

3. 3NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Medicines Intelligence, UNSW Sydney, Australia.

4. 4Health Systems Research, School of Population Health, UNSW Sydney, Australia.

5. 5The Daffodil Centre, The University of Sydney, a joint venture with Cancer Council NSW, Sydney, Australia.

6. 6School of Medicine and Public Health, College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing, The University of Newcastle, Australia.

7. 7Chris O'Brien Lifehouse, Camperdown, The University of Sydney, Camperdown, Australia.

8. 8Cancer Services Division, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

9. 9The Institute of Health Research and the School of Medicine, University of Notre Dame, Fremantle, Australia.

10. 10Sydney School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Camperdown, Australia.

Abstract

Abstract Background: We investigated differences in cumulative incidence of first distant recurrence (DR) following non-metastatic breast cancer over a time period when new adjuvant therapies became available in Australia. Methods: We conducted a health record linkage study of females with localized (T1–3N0) or regional (T4 or N+) breast cancer in the New South Wales Cancer Registry in 2001 to 2002 and 2006 to 2007. We linked cancer registry records with administrative records from hospitals, dispensed medicines, radiotherapy services, and death registrations to estimate the 9-year cumulative incidence of DR and describe use of adjuvant treatment. Results: The study included 13,170 women (2001–2002 n = 6,338, 2006–2007 n = 6,832). The 9-year cumulative incidence of DR was 3.6% [95% confidence interval (CI), 2.3%–4.9%] lower for 2006–2007 diagnoses (15.0%) than 2001–2002 (18.6%). Differences in the annual hazard of DR between cohorts were largest in year two. DR incidence declined for localized and regional disease. Decline was largest for ages <40 years (absolute difference, 14.4%; 95% CI, 8.3%–20.6%), whereas their use of adjuvant chemotherapy (2001–2002 49%, 2006–2007 75%) and HER2-targeted therapy (2001–2002 0%, 2006–2007 16%) increased. DR did not decline for ages ≥70 years (absolute difference, 0.9%; 95% CI, −3.6%–1.8%) who had low use of adjuvant chemotherapy and HER2-targeted therapy. Conclusions: This whole-of-population study suggests that DR incidence declined over time. Decline was largest for younger ages, coinciding with changes to adjuvant breast cancer therapy. Impact: Study findings support the need for trials addressing questions relevant to older people and cancer registry surveillance of DR to inform cancer control programs.

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

Subject

Oncology,Epidemiology

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