Abstract 17P
Background
In Australia, Indigenous people are natives and custodians of land. The mortality risk is more than double in Indigenous breast cancer women as compared to non- Indigenous women but carries lower incidence risk. Between 2001 and 2010 Indigenous Western Australian women who developed breast cancer were four times more likely to die of the disease than non-Indigenous women of the same age. The data is scarce but many factors are being studied. The effect of remoteness on mortality of indigenous women still needed to be established. The aim is to analyse remoteness as a factor causing effect on survival in Indigenous breast cancer women.
Methods
The data is collected retrospectively from Western Australian cancer Registry mostly, among other sources. A cohort of 100 patients was selected from database including half of indigenous and half non-indigenous women (1:1). At time of writing, 37 Indigenous and 33 Non–Indigenous breast cancer women data was available. The data collected, to analyze the median survival time (months) of patients with respect to Distance (Metropolitan vs Rural) and Indigenous & Non-Indigenous status.
Results
In survival analysis, it has been observed that both indigenous and non-indigenous who live in metropolitan showed better 10 year survival ; 184 months while who were in rural area showed reduced median survival time 130 months and differences among them was found to be significant (p = 0.03), suggesting better survival was associated with patients who live in metropolitan area. However, on analyzing the survival of Indigenous patients with respect to distance, it wasn’t statistically significant (p = 0.19) but still showed higher median survival for patients living in metropolitan area (153 months) as compared to remote rural areas (110 months). Further analyzing indigenous breast cancer patients outcomes with respect to metro area (153 months), 1000km or less and greater then 1000km (87 months); higher survival benefit trend for patient’s living close to metro area.
Conclusions
The data suggest that the Indigenous breast cancer women have inferior survival outcomes with respect to distance from metropolitan area, highlighting a strong co-relation of remoteness and survival disadvantage.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
A. Khan, A. Redfern.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
504P - A single center report for safety and efficacy of CT-707 in Chinese patients with advanced, anaplastic lymphoma kinase-rearranged non-small cell lung cancer or other tumours
Presenter: Peng Song
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
519P - Initial results of lung cancer genomic screening project for individualized medicine in Asia: LC-SCRUM-Asia
Presenter: Chih-Hsi Kuo
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
521P - A randomized, phase II study comparing irinotecan versus amrubicin as maintenance therapy after first-line induction therapy for extensive disease small cell lung cancer (HOT1401/NJLCG1401)
Presenter: Keisuke Baba
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
526P - A phase II study of apatinib in patients with recurrent/metastatic esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC)
Presenter: Li Chu
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
499P - Prevalence of uncommon epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) alterations detected by circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients in Hong Kong
Presenter: Oscar Siu Hong Chan
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
489P - Overall survival in patients with EGFRm+ NSCLC receiving sequential afatinib and osimertinib: Updated analysis of the GioTag study
Presenter: Maximilian J. Hochmair
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
509P - Second-line treatment after first-line vinorelbine in advanced platinum unfit NSCLC patients: An exploratory analysis of randomized Tempo-Lung trial
Presenter: Andrea Camerini
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
500P - Clinico-molecular characteristics of Chinese primary non-small cell lung cancer patients with compound EGFR mutations
Presenter: Jianchun Duan
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
527P - A multicenter study of NRG1 fusions in Chinese non-small cell lung cancer patients and response to afatinib using next generation sequencing
Presenter: Xingliang Li
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
481P - Updated survival outcomes of the phase II study of low starting dose of afatinib as first-line treatment in patients with EGFR mutation-positive non-small cell lung cancer (KTORG1402)
Presenter: Toshihide Yokoyama
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract