Variation in the survival of women with breast cancer in Scotland
- 1 September 1998
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in British Journal of Cancer
- Vol. 78 (5), 566-571
- https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1998.541
Abstract
We have investigated factors influencing the survival of women with early breast cancer in Scotland. In a retrospective study, clinical, treatment and 'service' factors, e.g. surgical case load, deprivation and geographical area (health board of first treatment) were recorded from hospital records. A total of 2148 women with invasive breast cancer diagnosed in 1987 were identified from the Scottish Cancer Registry, of whom 1619 without metastases at diagnosis underwent surgery as part of their primary treatment. In a multivariate analysis, clinical factors (age, clinical stage, pathological tumour size, node status and oestrogen receptor status) all influenced survival. After allowing for these clinical factors, surgical case load and deprivation did not have statistically significant effects on survival. By contrast, health board did affect survival. This was explained in part by the selection of patients for surgery. There appeared, however, to be a residual effect that may be related to differences in the use of adjuvant systemic treatment among the different health boards. We conclude that, in Scotland, geographical variation in both surgical and non-surgical treatment has a greater effect on variability in survival for women with breast cancer than surgical case load and deprivation.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Completeness of case ascertainment in a Scottish regional cancer registry for the year 1992Public Health, 1997
- Does it matter where you live? Treatment variation for breast cancer in YorkshireBritish Journal of Cancer, 1995
- Influence of clinician workload and patterns of treatment on survival from breast cancerThe Lancet, 1995
- How accurate are Scottish cancer registration data?British Journal of Cancer, 1994
- Relation between socioeconomic deprivation and pathological prognostic factors in women with breast cancerBMJ, 1994
- Management of breast cancer in southeast EnglandBMJ, 1994
- Death certification by House Officers and General Practitioners — practice and performancePublished by Oxford University Press (OUP) ,1993
- The Scottish Record Linkage System.1993
- Variations in breast cancer management between a teaching and a non-teaching districtEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 1992
- Social environment and breast cancer. A Cohort analysis of patient survivalCancer, 1983