A review of breast cancer care and outcomes in Latin America.

Oncologist

OptumInsight Life Sciences, Stockholm, Sweden.

Published: September 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women in Latin America, with high annual incidence (114,900 cases) and mortality (37,000 deaths), and these rates are expected to rise significantly by 2030.
  • Many women are diagnosed at younger ages, leading to lost productive years, with 30%-40% of cases being diagnosed at a metastatic stage, contributing to high mortality-to-incidence ratios indicative of poor survival rates.
  • While some countries like Costa Rica have shown notable improvements in survival rates and decreasing mortality-to-incidence ratios, challenges remain in early diagnosis, treatment access, and the overall data quality regarding breast cancer epidemiology in the region.

Article Abstract

This review presents an overview of breast cancer care, burden, and outcomes in Latin America, as well as the challenges and opportunities for improvement. Information was gleaned through a review of the literature, public databases, and conference presentations, in addition to a survey of clinical experts and patient organizations from the region. Breast cancer annual incidence (114,900 cases) and mortality (37,000 deaths) are the highest of all women's cancers in Latin America, and they are increasing. Twice as many breast cancer deaths are expected by 2030. In Peru, Mexico, Colombia, and Brazil, diagnosis and death at younger ages deprives society of numerous productive years, as does high disease occurrence in Argentina and Uruguay. Approximately 30%-40% of diagnoses are metastatic disease. High mortality-to-incidence ratios (MIRs) in Latin America indicate poor survival, partly because of the late stage at diagnosis and poorer access to treatment. Between 2002 and 2008, MIRs decreased in all countries, albeit unevenly. Costa Rica's change in MIR outpaced incidence growth, indicating impressive progress in breast cancer survival. The situation is similar, although to a lesser extent, in Colombia and Ecuador. The marginal drops of MIRs in Brazil and Mexico mainly reflect incidence growth rather than progress in outcomes. Panama's MIR is still high. Epidemiological data are scattered and of varying quality in Latin America. However, one could ascertain that the burden of breast cancer in the region is considerable and growing due to demographic changes, particularly the aging population, and socioeconomic development. Early diagnosis and population-wide access to evidence-based treatment remain unresolved problems, despite progress achieved by some countries.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3607519PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1634/theoncologist.2012-0373DOI Listing

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