JCO Global Oncology (Dec 2021)

Epidemiological Analyses Reveal a High Incidence of Breast Cancer in Young Women in Brazil

  • Leonardo Fleury Orlandini,
  • Maria Vitória do Nascimento Antonio,
  • Claiver Renato Espreafico Jr,
  • Priscila Longhin Bosquesi,
  • Omero Benedito Poli-Neto,
  • Jurandyr Moreira de Andrade,
  • Francisco José Cândido dos Reis,
  • Daniel Guimarães Tiezzi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1200/GO.20.00440
Journal volume & issue
no. 7
pp. 81 – 88

Abstract

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PURPOSEBreast cancer screening is not recommended for young women (< 40 years old); therefore, those diagnosed are more likely to have advanced and metastatic disease, reducing treatment outcomes. This study aimed to investigate breast cancer epidemiology among young women in Brazil.METHODSData from three publicly available databases and a cohort from a university hospital in Brazil were analyzed in a retrospective study. Descriptive statistics was performed on disease prevalence and stage distribution across age groups. Incidence was estimated using age-standardized incidence ratio. The impact of age in disease-specific survival was also analyzed.RESULTSInvasive breast cancer prevalence data by age group revealed that 4.4% and 20.6% of patients were < 35 and < 45 years old, respectively. In the United States, this prevalence was 1.85% and 11.5%, respectively (odds ratio [OR], 2.2; P < .0001). The percentage of regional and metastatic diseases were higher in São Paulo State (Fundação Oncocentro de São Paulo [FOSP]) compared with the United States (45% and 9.8% v 29% and 5.7%, respectively; P < .0001). In FOSP, regional and metastatic disease prevalence were higher among young patients (53.5% and 11.3%, respectively). The median tumor size in patients < 40 years old was higher (25.0 mm × 20.9 mm; P < .0001), and young patients have higher risk to be diagnosed with positive lymph nodes (OR, 1.5; P = .004) and higher proportion of luminal-B and triple-negative (TNBC) tumors. Young patients have a poor disease-specific survival because of late-stage diagnosis and more aggressive breast cancer subtypes (human epidermal growth factor receptor 2–enriched and TNBC) (P < .0001).CONCLUSIONIn Brazil, breast cancer prevalence among young patients and late-stage incidence during this age span is higher. Advanced disease and more aggressive subtypes lead to a significant impact on breast cancer-specific survival in young patients.