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Publication Abstract

Authors: Frost FJ, Tollestrup K, Trinkaus KM, Rodgers D, Kunde T, Petersen HV, Stidley CA

Title: Mammography screening and breast cancer tumor size in female members of a managed care organization.

Journal: Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 7(7):585-9

Date: 1998 Jul

Abstract: A study of temporal trends in mammography screening and changes in stage of disease at diagnosis was conducted among Hispanic and non-Hispanic white female members of the Lovelace Health Plan, Flexcare Plan, and Lovelace Senior Plan/Senior Options (LHP), a managed care organization. Two-year screening rates for female members ages 50-74 years were calculated for 1989-1996. From 1989-1996, mammography screening rates for non-Hispanic white female members increased from 65.5 to 71.6%, although this was not a statistically significant increase. Screening rates for Hispanic female members also increased from 50.6 to 62.7%, but they were significantly lower than for non-Hispanic white women. All breast cancers occurring among LHP female members ages 40-74 years were also identified for this same time period. A logistic regression model adjusting for age, year of diagnosis, ethnicity, and duration of enrollment prior to diagnosis found that statistically significant predictors of more advanced stage of disease at diagnosis included young age, diagnosis after 1991 for non-Hispanic white women, and diagnosis prior to 1992 for Hispanic women. Longer duration of enrollment prior to diagnosis was predictive of lower stage of disease, but the odds ratio was not statistically significant. For the time period 1992-1996, Hispanic women with breast cancer were more than twice as likely to have advanced stage of breast cancer compared with non-Hispanic white women (odds ratio, 2.12).


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