Global, regional, national burden of breast cancer in 185 countries: evidence from GLOBOCAN 2018

R Sharma - Breast Cancer Research and Treatment, 2021 - Springer
Breast Cancer Research and Treatment, 2021Springer
Purpose This study aims to examine the burden of breast cancer in 185 countries in 2018.
Methods The estimates of incidence, mortality, and prevalence of breast cancer were drawn
from GLOBOCAN 2018. The overall burden of breast cancer was gauged using breast
cancer burden index (BRCBI)—a novel index comprising age-standardized incidence rate
(ASIR), age-standardized mortality rate (ASMR), mortality-to-incidence ratio (MIR),
prevalence-to-incidence ratio (PIR), and prevalence-to-mortality ratio (PMR). The …
Purpose
This study aims to examine the burden of breast cancer in 185 countries in 2018.
Methods
The estimates of incidence, mortality, and prevalence of breast cancer were drawn from GLOBOCAN 2018. The overall burden of breast cancer was gauged using breast cancer burden index (BRCBI)—a novel index comprising age-standardized incidence rate (ASIR), age-standardized mortality rate (ASMR), mortality-to-incidence ratio (MIR), prevalence-to-incidence ratio (PIR), and prevalence-to-mortality ratio (PMR). The socioeconomic status of countries was measured using human development index (HDI)
Results
Globally, breast cancer was responsible for an estimated 626,679 deaths at age-standardized rate of 13/100,000; there were 2.1 million cases diagnosed in 2018 at age-standardized rate of 46.3/100,000. The ASIR varied 22-fold from 5/100,000 (Bhutan) to 113.2/100,000 (Belgium). The ASMR varied 13-fold from 2.7/100,000 (Bhutan) to 36.9/100,000 (Fiji). The HDI exhibited a positive gradient with ASIR (r = 0.73), PIR (r = 0.98), and PMR (r = 0.85); with MIR, however, it exhibited a negative association (r = − 0.83). The BRCBI spanned from 0.70 in Somalia to 78.92 in South Korea and exhibited a positive association with HDI (r = 0.76). An additional 46,823 female lives in 2018 and a cumulative total of 333,304 lives could have been saved over 2013–2018, had countries performed as per their HDI.
Conclusions
The substantial burden of breast cancer in developing and low-resource economies calls for a holistic approach to cancer management and control that includes oncologic infrastructure to provide cost-effective screening, diagnostic, therapeutic, and palliative services, greater breast cancer awareness, and mitigation of risk factors.
Springer
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