Breast Cancer Survival in Ontario's First Nations Women: Understanding the Determinants
This study builds on previous research showing that breast cancer survival is poorer for First Nations (FN) women compared to other Ontario women. Few studies have examined breast cancer survival in Indigenous populations compared to general populations; all of these report poorer survival among Ind...
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ftunivtoronto:oai:localhost:1807/24876 2023-05-15T16:15:55+02:00 Breast Cancer Survival in Ontario's First Nations Women: Understanding the Determinants Sheppard, Amanda Joan Chiarelli, Anna Maria Medical Science NO_RESTRICTION http://hdl.handle.net/1807/24876 en_ca eng http://hdl.handle.net/1807/24876 Breast cancer survival First Nations diagnosis Indigenous Ontario 0766 0573 0992 Thesis ftunivtoronto 2020-06-17T11:17:55Z This study builds on previous research showing that breast cancer survival is poorer for First Nations (FN) women compared to other Ontario women. Few studies have examined breast cancer survival in Indigenous populations compared to general populations; all of these report poorer survival among Indigenous people. Fewer still have examined potential factors related to the poorer survival, but these often suggest poorer prognosis even after adjustment for them. Study objectives were: to compare the distribution of demographic, prognostic and treatment factors between FN and non-FN women; to investigate factors associated with later diagnosis in FN women; to compare stage specific survival for FN and non-FN women controlling for important factors potentially associated with breast cancer survival; and to examine potential determinants of survival for FN women by stage at diagnosis. A case-case design was employed to compare FN women (n=287) diagnosed with invasive breast cancer to a frequency-matched random sample of women (n=671) from the general population diagnosed with breast cancer within the Ontario Cancer Registry. Women were matched (2:1) on period of diagnosis (1995-1999 and 2000-2004), age at diagnosis (<50 vs. 50≥), and Regional Cancer Centre (RCC). Stage at diagnosis and data relevant to the determinants of breast cancer survival were collected from medical charts at the RCCs. FN women were diagnosed with breast cancer at later stages compared to non-FN women. Having a non-screened method of detection and increasing BMI were associated with a later breast cancer diagnosis. FN women with comorbidity however were less likely to be diagnosed at a later stage. An unforeseen novel finding was that the survival disadvantage occurred after an early breast cancer diagnosis, whereas the survival experiences for those diagnosed at stages II+ were similar. In a multivariate analysis, elevated risk was observed for FN women in stage I, and significant risk was seen in women with comorbidity. These findings are actionable and can be used to improve the prognosis of FN women with breast cancer. It is likely that the same or similar factors are largely responsible for the survival disadvantage observed among Ontario FN people for most other major cancers. PhD Thesis First Nations University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space |
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University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space |
op_collection_id |
ftunivtoronto |
language |
English |
topic |
Breast cancer survival First Nations diagnosis Indigenous Ontario 0766 0573 0992 |
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Breast cancer survival First Nations diagnosis Indigenous Ontario 0766 0573 0992 Sheppard, Amanda Joan Breast Cancer Survival in Ontario's First Nations Women: Understanding the Determinants |
topic_facet |
Breast cancer survival First Nations diagnosis Indigenous Ontario 0766 0573 0992 |
description |
This study builds on previous research showing that breast cancer survival is poorer for First Nations (FN) women compared to other Ontario women. Few studies have examined breast cancer survival in Indigenous populations compared to general populations; all of these report poorer survival among Indigenous people. Fewer still have examined potential factors related to the poorer survival, but these often suggest poorer prognosis even after adjustment for them. Study objectives were: to compare the distribution of demographic, prognostic and treatment factors between FN and non-FN women; to investigate factors associated with later diagnosis in FN women; to compare stage specific survival for FN and non-FN women controlling for important factors potentially associated with breast cancer survival; and to examine potential determinants of survival for FN women by stage at diagnosis. A case-case design was employed to compare FN women (n=287) diagnosed with invasive breast cancer to a frequency-matched random sample of women (n=671) from the general population diagnosed with breast cancer within the Ontario Cancer Registry. Women were matched (2:1) on period of diagnosis (1995-1999 and 2000-2004), age at diagnosis (<50 vs. 50≥), and Regional Cancer Centre (RCC). Stage at diagnosis and data relevant to the determinants of breast cancer survival were collected from medical charts at the RCCs. FN women were diagnosed with breast cancer at later stages compared to non-FN women. Having a non-screened method of detection and increasing BMI were associated with a later breast cancer diagnosis. FN women with comorbidity however were less likely to be diagnosed at a later stage. An unforeseen novel finding was that the survival disadvantage occurred after an early breast cancer diagnosis, whereas the survival experiences for those diagnosed at stages II+ were similar. In a multivariate analysis, elevated risk was observed for FN women in stage I, and significant risk was seen in women with comorbidity. These findings are actionable and can be used to improve the prognosis of FN women with breast cancer. It is likely that the same or similar factors are largely responsible for the survival disadvantage observed among Ontario FN people for most other major cancers. PhD |
author2 |
Chiarelli, Anna Maria Medical Science |
format |
Thesis |
author |
Sheppard, Amanda Joan |
author_facet |
Sheppard, Amanda Joan |
author_sort |
Sheppard, Amanda Joan |
title |
Breast Cancer Survival in Ontario's First Nations Women: Understanding the Determinants |
title_short |
Breast Cancer Survival in Ontario's First Nations Women: Understanding the Determinants |
title_full |
Breast Cancer Survival in Ontario's First Nations Women: Understanding the Determinants |
title_fullStr |
Breast Cancer Survival in Ontario's First Nations Women: Understanding the Determinants |
title_full_unstemmed |
Breast Cancer Survival in Ontario's First Nations Women: Understanding the Determinants |
title_sort |
breast cancer survival in ontario's first nations women: understanding the determinants |
publishDate |
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url |
http://hdl.handle.net/1807/24876 |
genre |
First Nations |
genre_facet |
First Nations |
op_relation |
http://hdl.handle.net/1807/24876 |
_version_ |
1766001784603541504 |