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Breast Cancer in the Elderly: An Observational Study Investigating Compliance of Screening Mammography in an Underserved Community

BACKGROUND: The incidence of breast cancer increases with age. Individuals living in higher socioeconomic communities also have higher incidence secondary to early detection of breast cancer from increased accessibility to mammograms. This retrospective study studied the percentage of new breast can...

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Autores principales: Sharma, Shruti, Patel, Dixita, Pavuluri, Sushma, Stein, Amy, Patel, Binal, Qureshi, Nadia, Hasnuddin, Imran, Todorova, Tsvetelina, Srinivasan, Krishnan, Ghouse, Masood
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elmer Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8577604/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34804278
http://dx.doi.org/10.14740/wjon1397
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author Sharma, Shruti
Patel, Dixita
Pavuluri, Sushma
Stein, Amy
Patel, Binal
Qureshi, Nadia
Hasnuddin, Imran
Todorova, Tsvetelina
Srinivasan, Krishnan
Ghouse, Masood
author_facet Sharma, Shruti
Patel, Dixita
Pavuluri, Sushma
Stein, Amy
Patel, Binal
Qureshi, Nadia
Hasnuddin, Imran
Todorova, Tsvetelina
Srinivasan, Krishnan
Ghouse, Masood
author_sort Sharma, Shruti
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The incidence of breast cancer increases with age. Individuals living in higher socioeconomic communities also have higher incidence secondary to early detection of breast cancer from increased accessibility to mammograms. This retrospective study studied the percentage of new breast cancer cases in the elderly between 2010 and 2019, and investigated the compliance of screening mammography in some of the medically underserved suburbs of southern Chicago. METHODS: The parameters used to power this study include “age greater than 70” and “2010 to present” at the time the study was first initiated. The final data set contained 381 electronic health records (EMRs) that met the parameters of interest. We specifically looked at method of diagnosis, stage at diagnosis, date of last normal screening mammogram, hormone status, histology, race, and smoking history. RESULTS: Thirty percent of the breast cancer patients diagnosed at our institution were over 70 years of age between 2010 and 2019. Of the 381 patients included in the overall sample, 45% were diagnosed with breast cancer by screening mammogram, and 52% of individuals in the 70 - 75 age group were diagnosed with breast cancer by screening mammography. Only 40% of individuals in the 75+ age group were diagnosed with breast cancer by screening mammogram (P = 0.0234). Furthermore, in the overall sample, 63% had a normal screening mammogram at some time prior to their breast cancer diagnosis. In the 70 - 75 age group, 76% had a normal screening mammogram at some time prior to their breast cancer diagnosis. In the 75+ age group, only 54% had a normal screening mammogram at some time prior to their breast cancer diagnosis (P < 0.0001). Individuals in both age groups were more likely to have early-stage breast cancers and luminal A hormone expression. CONCLUSIONS: Decreased compliance to screening mammography is observed in the elderly living in underserved communities. Since the elderly are underrepresented in research, organizations do not have sufficient information to recommend screening mammography in the elderly. With increasing life expectancy, observational studies have demonstrated a mortality benefit with screening mammography by early detection of breast cancer, favorable breast cancer characteristics and potentially higher cure rates. Socioeconomic factors also affect screening compliance and likely influenced the results of our study. Future studies should investigate how individual factors influence screening mammography compliance in the elderly in underserved communities.
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spelling pubmed-85776042021-11-18 Breast Cancer in the Elderly: An Observational Study Investigating Compliance of Screening Mammography in an Underserved Community Sharma, Shruti Patel, Dixita Pavuluri, Sushma Stein, Amy Patel, Binal Qureshi, Nadia Hasnuddin, Imran Todorova, Tsvetelina Srinivasan, Krishnan Ghouse, Masood World J Oncol Original Article BACKGROUND: The incidence of breast cancer increases with age. Individuals living in higher socioeconomic communities also have higher incidence secondary to early detection of breast cancer from increased accessibility to mammograms. This retrospective study studied the percentage of new breast cancer cases in the elderly between 2010 and 2019, and investigated the compliance of screening mammography in some of the medically underserved suburbs of southern Chicago. METHODS: The parameters used to power this study include “age greater than 70” and “2010 to present” at the time the study was first initiated. The final data set contained 381 electronic health records (EMRs) that met the parameters of interest. We specifically looked at method of diagnosis, stage at diagnosis, date of last normal screening mammogram, hormone status, histology, race, and smoking history. RESULTS: Thirty percent of the breast cancer patients diagnosed at our institution were over 70 years of age between 2010 and 2019. Of the 381 patients included in the overall sample, 45% were diagnosed with breast cancer by screening mammogram, and 52% of individuals in the 70 - 75 age group were diagnosed with breast cancer by screening mammography. Only 40% of individuals in the 75+ age group were diagnosed with breast cancer by screening mammogram (P = 0.0234). Furthermore, in the overall sample, 63% had a normal screening mammogram at some time prior to their breast cancer diagnosis. In the 70 - 75 age group, 76% had a normal screening mammogram at some time prior to their breast cancer diagnosis. In the 75+ age group, only 54% had a normal screening mammogram at some time prior to their breast cancer diagnosis (P < 0.0001). Individuals in both age groups were more likely to have early-stage breast cancers and luminal A hormone expression. CONCLUSIONS: Decreased compliance to screening mammography is observed in the elderly living in underserved communities. Since the elderly are underrepresented in research, organizations do not have sufficient information to recommend screening mammography in the elderly. With increasing life expectancy, observational studies have demonstrated a mortality benefit with screening mammography by early detection of breast cancer, favorable breast cancer characteristics and potentially higher cure rates. Socioeconomic factors also affect screening compliance and likely influenced the results of our study. Future studies should investigate how individual factors influence screening mammography compliance in the elderly in underserved communities. Elmer Press 2021-10 2021-10-21 /pmc/articles/PMC8577604/ /pubmed/34804278 http://dx.doi.org/10.14740/wjon1397 Text en Copyright 2021, Sharma et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial 4.0 International License, which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Sharma, Shruti
Patel, Dixita
Pavuluri, Sushma
Stein, Amy
Patel, Binal
Qureshi, Nadia
Hasnuddin, Imran
Todorova, Tsvetelina
Srinivasan, Krishnan
Ghouse, Masood
Breast Cancer in the Elderly: An Observational Study Investigating Compliance of Screening Mammography in an Underserved Community
title Breast Cancer in the Elderly: An Observational Study Investigating Compliance of Screening Mammography in an Underserved Community
title_full Breast Cancer in the Elderly: An Observational Study Investigating Compliance of Screening Mammography in an Underserved Community
title_fullStr Breast Cancer in the Elderly: An Observational Study Investigating Compliance of Screening Mammography in an Underserved Community
title_full_unstemmed Breast Cancer in the Elderly: An Observational Study Investigating Compliance of Screening Mammography in an Underserved Community
title_short Breast Cancer in the Elderly: An Observational Study Investigating Compliance of Screening Mammography in an Underserved Community
title_sort breast cancer in the elderly: an observational study investigating compliance of screening mammography in an underserved community
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8577604/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34804278
http://dx.doi.org/10.14740/wjon1397
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