Abstract
We examined survival in screened-detected and non-screen-detected women diagnosed in the West Midlands (England) and New South Wales (Australia) in order to evaluate whether international differences in survival are related to early diagnosis, or to other factors relating to the healthcare women receive.
Women aged 50-65 years whom had been eligible for screening from 50 years were examined. Data for 5,628 women in West Midlands and 6,396 women in New South Wales were linked to screening service records (mean age at diagnosis 53.7 years). We estimated net survival and modelled the excess hazard ratio of breast cancer death by screening status.
Survival was lower for women in the West Midlands than in New South Wales (5-year net survival 90.9% [95% CI 89.9%-91.7%] compared with 93.4% [95% CI 92.6%-94.1%] respectively). The difference was greater between the two populations of non-screen-detected women (4.9%) compared to between screen-detected women, (1.8% after adjustment for lead-time and over-diagnosis). The adjusted excess hazard ratio of breast cancer death for West Midlands compared with New South Wales was greater in the non-screen detected group (EHR 2.00, 95% CI 1.70-2.31) but not significantly different to that for women whose cancer had been screen-detected (EHR 1.72, 95% CI 0.87-2.56).
In this study more than one in three breast cancer deaths in the West Midlands would have been avoided if survival had been the same as in New South Wales. The possibility that women in England receive poorer treatment is an important potential explanation which should be examined with care. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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