Document detail
ID

doi:10.1186/s12916-023-03004-4...

Author
Mubarik, Sumaira Malik, Saima Shakil Yanran, Zhang Hak, Eelko Nawsherwan Wang, Fang Yu, Chuanhua
Langue
en
Editor

BioMed Central

Category

Medicine & Public Health

Year

2023

listing date

9/6/2023

Keywords
breast cancer screening mortality case fatality disability cvd brics-plus sbe/cbe program burden previous study and/or cancer availability brics-plus breast screening mortality bc bcs
Metrics

Abstract

Background Numerous studies over the past four decades have revealed that breast cancer screening (BCS) significantly reduces breast cancer (BC) mortality.

However, in BRICS-plus countries, the association between BCS and BC case fatality and disability are unknown.

This study examines the association of different BCS approaches with age-standardized mortality, case-fatality, and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) rates, as well as with other biological and sociodemographic risk variables, across BRICS-plus from a national and economic perspective.

Methods In this ecological study applying mixed-effect multilevel regression models, a country-specific dataset was analyzed by combining data from the Global Burden of Disease study 2019 on female age-standardized BC mortality, incidence, and DALYs rates with information on national/regional BCS availability (against no such program or only a pilot program) and BCS type (only self-breast examination (SBE) and/or clinical breast examination (CBE) [SBE/CBE] versus SBE/CBE with mammographic screening availability [MM and/or SBE/CBE] versus SBE/CBE/mammographic with digital mammography and/or ultrasound (US) [DMM/US and/or previous tests] in BRICS-plus countries.

Results Compared to self/clinical breast examinations (SBE/CBE) across BRICS-plus, more complex BCS program availability was the most significant predictor of decreased mortality [MM and/or SBE/CBE: − 2.64, p  < 0.001; DMM/US and/or previous tests: − 1.40, p  < 0.001].

In the BRICS-plus, CVD presence, high BMI, second-hand smoke, and active smoking all contributed to an increase in BC mortality and DALY rate.

High-income and middle-income regions in BRICS-plus had significantly lower age-standardized BC mortality, case-fatality, and DALYs rates than low-income regions when nationwide BC screening programs were implemented.

Conclusions The availability of mammography (digital or traditional) and BCS is associated with breast cancer burden in BRICS-plus countries, with regional variations.

In light of high-quality evidence from previous causal studies, these findings further support the preventive role of mammography screening for BCS at the national level.

Intervening on BCS related risk factors may further reduce the disease burden associated with BC.

Mubarik, Sumaira,Malik, Saima Shakil,Yanran, Zhang,Hak, Eelko,Nawsherwan,Wang, Fang,Yu, Chuanhua, 2023, Estimating disparities in breast cancer screening programs towards mortality, case fatality, and DALYs across BRICS-plus, BioMed Central

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