PMID: 8611375Mar 1, 1996Paper

Variations in the management and survival of women under 50 years with breast cancer in the South East Thames region

British Journal of Cancer
M A RichardsW M Gregory

Abstract

A retrospective, population-based study was undertaken to determine variations in the management of women aged less than 50 years with primary breast cancer in different hospital settings and the influence of these variations on survival. A total of 1757 women who were resident in the South East Thames Health Region aged less than 50 years at the time of diagnosis of breast cancer and who presented during a 5 year period (January 1984 to December 1988) were recorded by the Thames Cancer Registry. The hospitals at which primary surgery was undertaken were categorised as teaching or non-teaching hospitals. The non-teaching hospitals were grouped according to the mean number of patients treated annually during the study period (< or = 2, 3-9, > or = 10 each year). The following factors were compared between these groups: age, extent of disease, tumour morphology, extent of primary surgery (mastectomy vs less than mastectomy), use of axillary surgery (any vs none) and use of systemic adjuvant therapy. Survival rates for the different groups were compared. Registration rates did not differ significantly between health districts. A total of 1485 (85%) women underwent surgery in over 90 different hospitals. In 1324 (86%) of these case...Continue Reading

Citations

Jul 31, 2003·British Journal of Cancer·J Stefoski MikeljevicD Forman
Feb 14, 1998·Journal of Clinical Pathology·P DeyJ Coyne
Oct 24, 2000·The British Journal of Surgery·J GolledgeM J Callam
Jan 10, 2001·Cancer·M P ColemanB De Stavola
Mar 16, 2001·Breast Cancer Research : BCR·M P Coleman
Jan 1, 2010·Cancers·Ahmed A S SalemHamza Abbass
Nov 27, 2002·Scandinavian Journal of Surgery : SJS : Official Organ for the Finnish Surgical Society and the Scandinavian Surgical Society·M Blichert-Toft, N Kroman
Apr 16, 2010·The Breast : Official Journal of the European Society of Mastology·Lisa Bailey

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