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Faculties and Departments => Allied Health Science => Medical Ultrasound => Topic started by: Saujanna Jafreen on October 16, 2016, 10:37:29 AM

Title: More young Asian women are diagnosed with breast cancer
Post by: Saujanna Jafreen on October 16, 2016, 10:37:29 AM
Despite advances in healthcare, breast cancer incidences in Asia are rising rapidly.

The risk of developing the disease increases with age, but Asian women are being diagnosed at a younger age compared to their Western counterparts.

“The peak age of breast cancer is about 10 years younger in Asia. There is also a suggestion that there may be a difference in the tumour biology of women diagnosed with breast cancer in Asian nations as compared to Western nations.

“This will have a consequence in the treatment recommended for these patients, with the aim of trying to improve survival rates. The main difference that impacts survival is the stage at which patients are presented,” says Professor Arlene Chan, a medical oncologist at Curtin University’s School of Medicine in Australia.

Chan was part of a team involved in the Lancet Oncology Commission to identify countries with a high population density and socio-cultural ethnic attitudes that would impact the disease in terms of patient presentation and acceptance of treatment.
She was presenting the findings at the inaugural Specialists Conference organised by Ramsay Sime Darby Health Care in Kuala Lumpur last week.

Approximately 10 per cent to 25 per cent of breast cancer patients in Asian countries present with de novo metastatic disease, compared to only 3 per cent to 5 per cent in Europe and United States. This means they are diagnosed as stage IV or advanced, from the start.
The disease profile in these patients is more severe, whereby higher proportions of local advanced tumours are seen and distant metastases detected, and multiple metastatic sites are more likely.

Chan says, “The proportion of patients presenting with stage III, which although considered potentially curable, has a much higher relapse rate than stages I and II. In Australia, about 10 per cent to 12 per cent of patients might present with stage III, whereas in certain parts of Asia, such as China and India, the rates are up to 35 per cent to 40 per cent.”

A number of factors were identified for this spike, and these include the lack of screening programmes, population density, scarcity of resources, and cultural restrictions and limitations.

“In India, for example, women do not present themselves even when they feel a lump, for fear of bringing shame to the family; a lack of understanding on whether treatment can be delivered; fear of surgery; and unavailability of drugs. The same applies with metastatic and locally-advanced cases. These are large, potentially fungating, ulcerating tumours that also tends to be in a younger age group,” she says.

A fungating wound is a result of cancer that is growing under the skin, breaking through it to create a wound. As the cancer grows, it blocks and damages tiny blood vessels, which can starve the area of oxygen. This causes the skin and underlying tissue to die.

Chan adds, “There is data to show that breast cancer occurring in those under the age of 30 or 35 may have worse biological behaviour.

“In terms of oestrogen-positive breast cancer, the standard of care is anti-oestrogen treatment to reduce the risk of relapse, yet in the study, it was found that there is a high likelihood that a Chinese would decline treatment. For patients who decline conventional treatment, their outcome and data never get collected.”

Locally, our cancer data is poor (the last National Cancer Registry report was updated in 2007), so most analyses rely on estimates by Globocan, an international agency for research on cancer.

According to a 2016 report Breast Cancer in Asia: The Challenge and Response, written by The Economic Intelligence Unit and commissioned by Pfizer, the Malaysian age standardised rate (ASR) of incidence is 38.7 per 100,000 a year, which is below the global mean, but mortality is at 18.9, 47 per cent higher than the world figure!

Consultant breast surgeon and president of Breast Surgery International, Dr Yip Cheng Har, says: “That might translate to one in 20 Malaysian women getting breast cancer in their lives, with the incidence highest among the Chinese and lowest among the Malays.

 “Malaysian women present at an earlier age; the median age is about 50, with 50 per cent below 50 (years of age), whereas in Western countries, only 20 per cent are below the age of 50. The age group at risk right now is 40 to 49, but the mean age is increasing,” said Har.

“The reason is not necessarily that younger women have higher incidences. It’s because looking at the age-specific incidence rate, Malaysia has a younger demographic, with a median age of 26. In the United Kingdom, the median age is 40. Only 15 per cent of our population is above 60, so that’s why the ASR goes up,” Har explained further.

Breast cancer is the most well-researched form of cancer, and if caught early, it is largely treatable. In well-off countries in the region (South Korea, Hong Kong, Australia, Japan, Taiwan, Singapore), the five-year survival rate is typically between 80 per cent and 92 per cent, with five countries having figures roughly comparable to that of the US.

But, data indicates that progress against the disease is highly uneven in the region, with five-year survival rates in developing countries such as Thailand, India and Malaysia, far behind their developed country counterparts.

Of the 10 countries studied, Malaysia ranked the lowest for five-year survival rate at 49 per cent.

“This figure is embarrassing because we are an upper middle income country, and yet, we’re on par with lower income countries like Cambodia.

“It’s not because we don’t have a good universal healthcare system but our women are resistant to treatment. Despite the free screening programmes widely available, women throw away these vouchers!” laments Har, who has published many papers on the subject.
Title: Re: More young Asian women are diagnosed with breast cancer
Post by: smriti.te on November 27, 2016, 12:34:10 AM
Thanks for the post...
Title: Re: More young Asian women are diagnosed with breast cancer
Post by: tasmiaT on August 15, 2018, 05:11:55 PM
Higher incidence indicates better screening facilities are available unless they are false positives, now its imperative to find out, why is there such a high incidence rate?