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Closing the global cancer divide- performance of breast cancer care services in a middle income developing country

BACKGROUND: Cancer is the leading cause of deaths in the world. A widening disparity in cancer burden has emerged between high income and low-middle income countries. Closing this cancer divide is an ethical imperative but there is a dearth of data on cancer services from developing countries. METHO...

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Autores principales: Lim, Gerard CC, Aina, Emran N, Cheah, Soon K, Ismail, Fuad, Ho, Gwo F, Tho, Lye M, Yip, Cheng H, Taib, Nur A, Chong, Kwang J, Dharmaratnam, Jayendran, Abdullah, Matin M, Mohamed, Ahmad K, Ho, Kean F, Ratnavelu, Kananathan, Lim, Chiao M, Leong, Kin W, Wahid, Ibrahim A, Lim, Teck O
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3994538/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24650245
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-14-212
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author Lim, Gerard CC
Aina, Emran N
Cheah, Soon K
Ismail, Fuad
Ho, Gwo F
Tho, Lye M
Yip, Cheng H
Taib, Nur A
Chong, Kwang J
Dharmaratnam, Jayendran
Abdullah, Matin M
Mohamed, Ahmad K
Ho, Kean F
Ratnavelu, Kananathan
Lim, Chiao M
Leong, Kin W
Wahid, Ibrahim A
Lim, Teck O
author_facet Lim, Gerard CC
Aina, Emran N
Cheah, Soon K
Ismail, Fuad
Ho, Gwo F
Tho, Lye M
Yip, Cheng H
Taib, Nur A
Chong, Kwang J
Dharmaratnam, Jayendran
Abdullah, Matin M
Mohamed, Ahmad K
Ho, Kean F
Ratnavelu, Kananathan
Lim, Chiao M
Leong, Kin W
Wahid, Ibrahim A
Lim, Teck O
author_sort Lim, Gerard CC
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Cancer is the leading cause of deaths in the world. A widening disparity in cancer burden has emerged between high income and low-middle income countries. Closing this cancer divide is an ethical imperative but there is a dearth of data on cancer services from developing countries. METHODS: This was a multi-center, retrospective observational cohort study which enrolled women with breast cancer (BC) attending 8 participating cancer centers in Malaysia in 2011. All patients were followed up for 12 months from diagnosis to determine their access to therapies. We assess care performance using measures developed by Quality Oncology Practice Initiative, American Society of Clinical Oncology/National Comprehensive Cancer Network, American College of Surgeons’ National Accreditation Program for Breast Centers as well as our local guideline. RESULTS: Seven hundred and fifty seven patients were included in the study; they represent about 20% of incident BC in Malaysia. Performance results were mixed. Late presentation was 40%. Access to diagnostic and breast surgery services were timely; the interval from presentation to tissue diagnosis was short (median = 9 days), and all who needed surgery could receive it with only a short wait (median = 11 days). Performance of radiation, chemo and hormonal therapy services showed that about 75 to 80% of patients could access these treatments timely, and those who could not were because they sought alternative treatment or they refused treatment. Access to Trastuzumab was limited to only 19% of eligible patients. CONCLUSIONS: These performance results are probably acceptable for a middle income country though far below the 95% or higher adherence rates routinely reported by centres in developed countries. High cost trastuzumab was inaccessible to this population without public funding support.
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spelling pubmed-39945382014-04-23 Closing the global cancer divide- performance of breast cancer care services in a middle income developing country Lim, Gerard CC Aina, Emran N Cheah, Soon K Ismail, Fuad Ho, Gwo F Tho, Lye M Yip, Cheng H Taib, Nur A Chong, Kwang J Dharmaratnam, Jayendran Abdullah, Matin M Mohamed, Ahmad K Ho, Kean F Ratnavelu, Kananathan Lim, Chiao M Leong, Kin W Wahid, Ibrahim A Lim, Teck O BMC Cancer Research Article BACKGROUND: Cancer is the leading cause of deaths in the world. A widening disparity in cancer burden has emerged between high income and low-middle income countries. Closing this cancer divide is an ethical imperative but there is a dearth of data on cancer services from developing countries. METHODS: This was a multi-center, retrospective observational cohort study which enrolled women with breast cancer (BC) attending 8 participating cancer centers in Malaysia in 2011. All patients were followed up for 12 months from diagnosis to determine their access to therapies. We assess care performance using measures developed by Quality Oncology Practice Initiative, American Society of Clinical Oncology/National Comprehensive Cancer Network, American College of Surgeons’ National Accreditation Program for Breast Centers as well as our local guideline. RESULTS: Seven hundred and fifty seven patients were included in the study; they represent about 20% of incident BC in Malaysia. Performance results were mixed. Late presentation was 40%. Access to diagnostic and breast surgery services were timely; the interval from presentation to tissue diagnosis was short (median = 9 days), and all who needed surgery could receive it with only a short wait (median = 11 days). Performance of radiation, chemo and hormonal therapy services showed that about 75 to 80% of patients could access these treatments timely, and those who could not were because they sought alternative treatment or they refused treatment. Access to Trastuzumab was limited to only 19% of eligible patients. CONCLUSIONS: These performance results are probably acceptable for a middle income country though far below the 95% or higher adherence rates routinely reported by centres in developed countries. High cost trastuzumab was inaccessible to this population without public funding support. BioMed Central 2014-03-20 /pmc/articles/PMC3994538/ /pubmed/24650245 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-14-212 Text en Copyright © 2014 Lim 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 credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lim, Gerard CC
Aina, Emran N
Cheah, Soon K
Ismail, Fuad
Ho, Gwo F
Tho, Lye M
Yip, Cheng H
Taib, Nur A
Chong, Kwang J
Dharmaratnam, Jayendran
Abdullah, Matin M
Mohamed, Ahmad K
Ho, Kean F
Ratnavelu, Kananathan
Lim, Chiao M
Leong, Kin W
Wahid, Ibrahim A
Lim, Teck O
Closing the global cancer divide- performance of breast cancer care services in a middle income developing country
title Closing the global cancer divide- performance of breast cancer care services in a middle income developing country
title_full Closing the global cancer divide- performance of breast cancer care services in a middle income developing country
title_fullStr Closing the global cancer divide- performance of breast cancer care services in a middle income developing country
title_full_unstemmed Closing the global cancer divide- performance of breast cancer care services in a middle income developing country
title_short Closing the global cancer divide- performance of breast cancer care services in a middle income developing country
title_sort closing the global cancer divide- performance of breast cancer care services in a middle income developing country
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3994538/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24650245
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-14-212
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