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Impact of Primary Care Delay on Progression of Breast Cancer in a Black African Population: A Multicentered Survey

BACKGROUND: Reports are scanty on the impact of long primary care interval in breast cancer. Exploratory reports in Nigeria and other low-middle-income countries suggest detrimental impact. The primary aim was to describe the impact of long primary care interval on breast cancer progression, and the...

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Autores principales: Agodirin, Olayide, Olatoke, Samuel, Rahman, Ganiyu, Olaogun, Julius, Kolawole, Oladapo, Agboola, John, Olasehinde, Olalekan, Katung, Aba, Ayandipo, Omobolaji, Etonyeaku, Amarachukwu, Ajiboye, Anthony, Oguntola, Soliu, Fatudimu, Oluwafemi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6702851/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31485229
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/2407138
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author Agodirin, Olayide
Olatoke, Samuel
Rahman, Ganiyu
Olaogun, Julius
Kolawole, Oladapo
Agboola, John
Olasehinde, Olalekan
Katung, Aba
Ayandipo, Omobolaji
Etonyeaku, Amarachukwu
Ajiboye, Anthony
Oguntola, Soliu
Fatudimu, Oluwafemi
author_facet Agodirin, Olayide
Olatoke, Samuel
Rahman, Ganiyu
Olaogun, Julius
Kolawole, Oladapo
Agboola, John
Olasehinde, Olalekan
Katung, Aba
Ayandipo, Omobolaji
Etonyeaku, Amarachukwu
Ajiboye, Anthony
Oguntola, Soliu
Fatudimu, Oluwafemi
author_sort Agodirin, Olayide
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Reports are scanty on the impact of long primary care interval in breast cancer. Exploratory reports in Nigeria and other low-middle-income countries suggest detrimental impact. The primary aim was to describe the impact of long primary care interval on breast cancer progression, and the secondary aim was to describe the factors perceived by patients as the reason(s) for long intervals. METHOD: Questionnaire-based survey was used in 9 Nigerian tertiary institutions between May 2017 and July 2018. The study hypothesis was that the majority of patients stayed >30 days, and the majority experienced stage migration in primary care interval. Assessment of the impact of the length of interval on tumor stage was done by survival analysis technique, and clustering analysis was used to find subgroups of the patient journey. RESULTS: A total of 237 patients presented to primary care personnel with tumor ≤5cm (mean 3.4±1.2cm). A total of 151 (69.3%, 95% CI 62.0-75.0) stayed >30 days in primary care interval. Risk of stage migration in primary care interval was 49.3% (95% CI 42.5%-56.3%). The most common reasons for long intervals were symptom misinformation and misdiagnosis. Clustering analysis showed 4 clusters of patients' experience and journey: long interval due to distance, long interval due to misinformation, long interval due to deliberate delaying, and not short interval—prepared for treatment. CONCLUSION: The majority of patients stayed longer than 30 days in primary care interval. Long primary care interval was associated with a higher risk of stage migration, and more patients reported misinformation and misdiagnosis as reasons for a long interval.
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spelling pubmed-67028512019-09-04 Impact of Primary Care Delay on Progression of Breast Cancer in a Black African Population: A Multicentered Survey Agodirin, Olayide Olatoke, Samuel Rahman, Ganiyu Olaogun, Julius Kolawole, Oladapo Agboola, John Olasehinde, Olalekan Katung, Aba Ayandipo, Omobolaji Etonyeaku, Amarachukwu Ajiboye, Anthony Oguntola, Soliu Fatudimu, Oluwafemi J Cancer Epidemiol Research Article BACKGROUND: Reports are scanty on the impact of long primary care interval in breast cancer. Exploratory reports in Nigeria and other low-middle-income countries suggest detrimental impact. The primary aim was to describe the impact of long primary care interval on breast cancer progression, and the secondary aim was to describe the factors perceived by patients as the reason(s) for long intervals. METHOD: Questionnaire-based survey was used in 9 Nigerian tertiary institutions between May 2017 and July 2018. The study hypothesis was that the majority of patients stayed >30 days, and the majority experienced stage migration in primary care interval. Assessment of the impact of the length of interval on tumor stage was done by survival analysis technique, and clustering analysis was used to find subgroups of the patient journey. RESULTS: A total of 237 patients presented to primary care personnel with tumor ≤5cm (mean 3.4±1.2cm). A total of 151 (69.3%, 95% CI 62.0-75.0) stayed >30 days in primary care interval. Risk of stage migration in primary care interval was 49.3% (95% CI 42.5%-56.3%). The most common reasons for long intervals were symptom misinformation and misdiagnosis. Clustering analysis showed 4 clusters of patients' experience and journey: long interval due to distance, long interval due to misinformation, long interval due to deliberate delaying, and not short interval—prepared for treatment. CONCLUSION: The majority of patients stayed longer than 30 days in primary care interval. Long primary care interval was associated with a higher risk of stage migration, and more patients reported misinformation and misdiagnosis as reasons for a long interval. Hindawi 2019-08-07 /pmc/articles/PMC6702851/ /pubmed/31485229 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/2407138 Text en Copyright © 2019 Olayide Agodirin et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Agodirin, Olayide
Olatoke, Samuel
Rahman, Ganiyu
Olaogun, Julius
Kolawole, Oladapo
Agboola, John
Olasehinde, Olalekan
Katung, Aba
Ayandipo, Omobolaji
Etonyeaku, Amarachukwu
Ajiboye, Anthony
Oguntola, Soliu
Fatudimu, Oluwafemi
Impact of Primary Care Delay on Progression of Breast Cancer in a Black African Population: A Multicentered Survey
title Impact of Primary Care Delay on Progression of Breast Cancer in a Black African Population: A Multicentered Survey
title_full Impact of Primary Care Delay on Progression of Breast Cancer in a Black African Population: A Multicentered Survey
title_fullStr Impact of Primary Care Delay on Progression of Breast Cancer in a Black African Population: A Multicentered Survey
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Primary Care Delay on Progression of Breast Cancer in a Black African Population: A Multicentered Survey
title_short Impact of Primary Care Delay on Progression of Breast Cancer in a Black African Population: A Multicentered Survey
title_sort impact of primary care delay on progression of breast cancer in a black african population: a multicentered survey
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6702851/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31485229
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/2407138
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