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Duration of Signs and Survival in Premenopausal Women with Breast Cancer
Authors:Richard R. Love  Nguyen Ba Duc  Linda C. Baumann  Pham Thi Hoang Anh  Ta Van To  Zheng Qian  Thomas C. Havighurst
Affiliation:Department of Medicine, Section of Medical Oncology, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine, Madison, WI, USA. rrlove@facstaff.wisc.edu
Abstract:CONDENSED: Among 550 women reporting a lump as the first sign of breast cancer, those with this sign for 6-29 months compared to those with 1-6 months, had bigger tumors and more frequent axillary node involvement. Overall survival, however, was not significantly different in these two groups. BACKGROUND: The relationship of delay in diagnosis of breast cancer to survival is uncertain. METHODS: We evaluated the relationship of patient-reported duration of signs of breast cancer to survival in participants in a clinical trial of adjuvant hormonal therapy in Vietnam and China. RESULTS: Among 550 women reporting a lump as the first sign of breast cancer and information on when this appeared, the median duration of this sign before diagnosis was 6 months. Comparing two groups of patients with durations of lumps 1-6 months and 6-29 months, the group with longer duration of lumps had larger tumors clinically and pathologically (p = 0.0006, and p = 0.004), more frequent axillary node involvement (p = 0.008), and shorter but not statistically different disease-free and overall survival from the time of diagnosis (p = 0.09 and 0.35, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Breast cancer evolves slowly in the detectable period of its natural history. The impact of delays in diagnosis of less than 6 months is likely to be very limited; delays more than 6 months appear to have some, but marginal impact on survival.
Keywords:breast cancer  delay  signs  survival
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