Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, Biostatistics Branch, Executive Plaza South, Rm 8036, 6120 Executive Blvd, Bethesda, MD, USA.
J Natl Cancer Inst. 2011 Sep 21;103(18):1397-402. doi: 10.1093/jnci/djr257. Epub 2011 Jul 13.
The incidence of breast cancer increased in the United States until circa 2000 then decreased, mostly among women with estrogen receptor (ER)-positive cancers. Time trends provide important clues for cancer etiology and prevention; however, the observed trends of ER-positive and ER-negative breast cancers can be biased by missing ER data.
We developed a simple imputation method to correct invasive female breast cancer incidence for missing or unknown ER expression, using nationally representative data from the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program during 1980-2008, including 588,720 invasive female breast cancer patients with 471,336,233 woman-years of follow-up. Corrected rates of ER-positive and ER-negative breast cancers were used to calculate age-standardized incidence rates, estimated annual percentage changes, and projections derived from age-period-cohort models.
The recent decrease in the incidence of breast cancer overall stabilized near 200 per 100,000 woman-years by 2007-2008, reflecting a transient decrease in ER-positive cancers and a steady decrease in ER-negative cancers. The projected incidence rate for breast cancer overall through the year 2016 was similar to the incidence rate during 2007-2008. In contrast, rates of ER-positive breast cancers were projected to increase 5.3% (95% confidence interval = 5.2% to 5.4%), whereas rates of ER-negative breast cancers were projected to decrease 11.4% (95% confidence interval = 11.3% to 11.6%) during 2009-2016.
Recent changes in breast cancer incidence overall reflect the superimposition of divergent trends in ER-positive and ER-negative cancers. If current trends continue, the incidence of ER-positive breast cancers will increase, the incidence of ER-negative breast cancers will continue to decrease, and the incidence of breast cancer overall will remain similar to its current level.
美国的乳腺癌发病率在 2000 年前后达到高峰,随后开始下降,主要发生在雌激素受体(ER)阳性癌症患者中。时间趋势为癌症病因学和预防提供了重要线索;然而,ER 阳性和 ER 阴性乳腺癌的观察趋势可能会因 ER 数据缺失而产生偏差。
我们使用美国国家癌症研究所监测、流行病学和最终结果计划(1980-2008 年)的全国代表性数据,开发了一种简单的缺失或未知 ER 表达的女性浸润性乳腺癌发病率校正方法,包括 588720 名女性浸润性乳腺癌患者和 471336233 名女性随访年数。校正后的 ER 阳性和 ER 阴性乳腺癌发病率用于计算年龄标准化发病率、估计年百分比变化,并从年龄-时期-队列模型中得出预测结果。
整体乳腺癌发病率的近期下降在 2007-2008 年稳定在每 10 万人 200 例左右,反映了 ER 阳性癌症的短暂下降和 ER 阴性癌症的稳定下降。到 2016 年,整体乳腺癌发病率的预测值与 2007-2008 年的发病率相似。相比之下,预计 ER 阳性乳腺癌的发病率将增加 5.3%(95%置信区间为 5.2%至 5.4%),而 ER 阴性乳腺癌的发病率预计将在 2009-2016 年间下降 11.4%(95%置信区间为 11.3%至 11.6%)。
整体乳腺癌发病率的近期变化反映了 ER 阳性和 ER 阴性癌症趋势的叠加。如果当前趋势持续下去,ER 阳性乳腺癌的发病率将上升,ER 阴性乳腺癌的发病率将继续下降,整体乳腺癌的发病率将保持在目前水平。