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Epidemiology and patterns of care for invasive breast carcinoma at a community hospital in Southern India

BACKGROUND: Breast cancer incidence in India is on rise. We report epidemiological, clinical and survival patterns of breast cancer patients from community perspective. METHODS: All breast cancer patients treated at this hospital from July 2000 to July 2005 were included. All had cytological or hist...

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Autores principales: Kuraparthy, Sambasivaiah, Reddy, Kumaraswamy M, Yadagiri, Lakshmi Amancharla, Yutla, Mutheeswaraiah, Venkata, Phanindra Bobbidi, Kadainti, Sarma VS, Reddy, Ramasubba PV
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1891296/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17519044
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-7819-5-56
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author Kuraparthy, Sambasivaiah
Reddy, Kumaraswamy M
Yadagiri, Lakshmi Amancharla
Yutla, Mutheeswaraiah
Venkata, Phanindra Bobbidi
Kadainti, Sarma VS
Reddy, Ramasubba PV
author_facet Kuraparthy, Sambasivaiah
Reddy, Kumaraswamy M
Yadagiri, Lakshmi Amancharla
Yutla, Mutheeswaraiah
Venkata, Phanindra Bobbidi
Kadainti, Sarma VS
Reddy, Ramasubba PV
author_sort Kuraparthy, Sambasivaiah
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Breast cancer incidence in India is on rise. We report epidemiological, clinical and survival patterns of breast cancer patients from community perspective. METHODS: All breast cancer patients treated at this hospital from July 2000 to July 2005 were included. All had cytological or histological confirmation of breast cancer. TNM guidelines for staging and Immunohistochemistry to assess the receptor status were used. Either lumpectomy with axillary lymph node dissection or Modified radical mastectomy (MRM) was done for operable breast cancer, followed by 6 cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy with FAC or CMF regimens to patients with pT >1 cm or lymph node positive or estrogen receptor negative and radiotherapy to patients after breast conservation surgery, pT size > 5 cm, 4 or more positive nodes and stage IIIB disease. Patients with positive Estrogen receptor or Progesterone receptor were advised Tamoxifene 20 mg per day for 3 years. Descriptive analysis was performed. Independent T test and Chi-square test were used. Overall survival time was computed by Kaplan – Meier method. RESULTS: Of 1488 cancer patients, 122 (8.2%) had breast cancer. Of 122 patients, 96.7% had invasive breast carcinoma and 3.3% had sarcoma. 94% came from the rural and semi urban areas. Premenopausal women were 27%. The median age was 50 years. Stage I-6.8%, II-45.8%, III-22%, IV-6.8%, Bilateral breast cancer – 2.5%. The mean pT size was 3.9 cm. ER and PR were positive in 31.6% and 28.1% respectively. MRM was done in 93.8%, while 6.3% patients underwent breast conservation surgery. The mean of the lymph nodes dissected were 3. CMF and FAC regimens were used in 48.8% and 51.2% of patients respectively. FAC group were younger than the CMF group (43.6 yr vs. 54 yrs, P = 0.000). Toxicities were more in FAC than CMF group, alopecia (100% vs. 26.2%), grade2 or more emesis (31.8% vs. 9.2%), grade2 or more fatigue (40.9% vs.19%), anemia (43.1% vs. 16.6%). Median Survival for the cohort was 50.8 months. ER positive patients had better median survival (P = 0.05). CONCLUSION: MRM was the most frequent surgical option. CMF and FAC showed equivalent survival. FAC chemotherapy was more toxic than CMF. ER positive tumors have superior survival. Overall 3 year survival was 70 percent
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spelling pubmed-18912962007-06-13 Epidemiology and patterns of care for invasive breast carcinoma at a community hospital in Southern India Kuraparthy, Sambasivaiah Reddy, Kumaraswamy M Yadagiri, Lakshmi Amancharla Yutla, Mutheeswaraiah Venkata, Phanindra Bobbidi Kadainti, Sarma VS Reddy, Ramasubba PV World J Surg Oncol Research BACKGROUND: Breast cancer incidence in India is on rise. We report epidemiological, clinical and survival patterns of breast cancer patients from community perspective. METHODS: All breast cancer patients treated at this hospital from July 2000 to July 2005 were included. All had cytological or histological confirmation of breast cancer. TNM guidelines for staging and Immunohistochemistry to assess the receptor status were used. Either lumpectomy with axillary lymph node dissection or Modified radical mastectomy (MRM) was done for operable breast cancer, followed by 6 cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy with FAC or CMF regimens to patients with pT >1 cm or lymph node positive or estrogen receptor negative and radiotherapy to patients after breast conservation surgery, pT size > 5 cm, 4 or more positive nodes and stage IIIB disease. Patients with positive Estrogen receptor or Progesterone receptor were advised Tamoxifene 20 mg per day for 3 years. Descriptive analysis was performed. Independent T test and Chi-square test were used. Overall survival time was computed by Kaplan – Meier method. RESULTS: Of 1488 cancer patients, 122 (8.2%) had breast cancer. Of 122 patients, 96.7% had invasive breast carcinoma and 3.3% had sarcoma. 94% came from the rural and semi urban areas. Premenopausal women were 27%. The median age was 50 years. Stage I-6.8%, II-45.8%, III-22%, IV-6.8%, Bilateral breast cancer – 2.5%. The mean pT size was 3.9 cm. ER and PR were positive in 31.6% and 28.1% respectively. MRM was done in 93.8%, while 6.3% patients underwent breast conservation surgery. The mean of the lymph nodes dissected were 3. CMF and FAC regimens were used in 48.8% and 51.2% of patients respectively. FAC group were younger than the CMF group (43.6 yr vs. 54 yrs, P = 0.000). Toxicities were more in FAC than CMF group, alopecia (100% vs. 26.2%), grade2 or more emesis (31.8% vs. 9.2%), grade2 or more fatigue (40.9% vs.19%), anemia (43.1% vs. 16.6%). Median Survival for the cohort was 50.8 months. ER positive patients had better median survival (P = 0.05). CONCLUSION: MRM was the most frequent surgical option. CMF and FAC showed equivalent survival. FAC chemotherapy was more toxic than CMF. ER positive tumors have superior survival. Overall 3 year survival was 70 percent BioMed Central 2007-05-23 /pmc/articles/PMC1891296/ /pubmed/17519044 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-7819-5-56 Text en Copyright © 2007 Kuraparthy et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Kuraparthy, Sambasivaiah
Reddy, Kumaraswamy M
Yadagiri, Lakshmi Amancharla
Yutla, Mutheeswaraiah
Venkata, Phanindra Bobbidi
Kadainti, Sarma VS
Reddy, Ramasubba PV
Epidemiology and patterns of care for invasive breast carcinoma at a community hospital in Southern India
title Epidemiology and patterns of care for invasive breast carcinoma at a community hospital in Southern India
title_full Epidemiology and patterns of care for invasive breast carcinoma at a community hospital in Southern India
title_fullStr Epidemiology and patterns of care for invasive breast carcinoma at a community hospital in Southern India
title_full_unstemmed Epidemiology and patterns of care for invasive breast carcinoma at a community hospital in Southern India
title_short Epidemiology and patterns of care for invasive breast carcinoma at a community hospital in Southern India
title_sort epidemiology and patterns of care for invasive breast carcinoma at a community hospital in southern india
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1891296/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17519044
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-7819-5-56
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