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. 2022 Mar 8:12:845527.
doi: 10.3389/fonc.2022.845527. eCollection 2022.

Socioeconomic, Clinical, and Molecular Features of Breast Cancer Influence Overall Survival of Latin American Women

Liz Maria de Almeida  1 Sandra Cortés  2 Marta Vilensky  3 Olivia Valenzuela  4 Laura Cortes-Sanabria  5 Mirian de Souza  1 Rafael Alonso Barbeito  6 Eliana Abdelhay  1 Nora Artagaveytia  7 Adrian Daneri-Navarro  8 Andrea S Llera  9 Bettina Müller  10 Osvaldo L Podhajcer  9 Carlos Velazquez  4 Elsa Alcoba  11 Isabel Alonso  12 Alicia I Bravo  13 Natalia Camejo  7 Dirce Maria Carraro  14 Mónica Castro  3 Sandra Cataldi  15 Alfonso Cayota  16 Mauricio Cerda  17 Alicia Colombo  17 Susanne Crocamo  1 Alicia Del Toro-Arreola  8 Raul Delgadillo-Cristerna  5 Lucia Delgado  7 Marisa Dreyer Breitenbach  18 Elmer Fernández  19 Jorge Fernández  20 Wanda Fernández  21 Ramon A Franco-Topete  22 Fancy Gaete  23 Jorge Gómez  24 Leivy P Gonzalez-Ramirez  8 Marisol Guerrero  25 Susan A Gutierrez-Rubio  8 Beatriz Jalfin  13 Alejandra Lopez-Vazquez  4 Dora Loria  3 Silvia Míguez  11 Andres de J Moran-Mendoza  26 Gilberto Morgan-Villela  5 Carina Mussetti  27 Maria Aparecida Nagai  28 Antonio Oceguera-Villanueva  29 Rui M Reis  30 Javier Retamales  31 Robinson Rodriguez  32 Cristina Rosales  11 Efrain Salas-Gonzalez  25 Laura Segovia  33 Juan M Sendoya  9 Aida A Silva-Garcia  22 Stella Viña  3 Livia Zagame  29 Beth Jones  34 Moysés Szklo  35 United States-Latin American Cancer Research Network (US-LACRN)
Collaborators, Affiliations

Socioeconomic, Clinical, and Molecular Features of Breast Cancer Influence Overall Survival of Latin American Women

Liz Maria de Almeida et al. Front Oncol. .

Abstract

Molecular profile of breast cancer in Latin-American women was studied in five countries: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, and Uruguay. Data about socioeconomic characteristics, risk factors, prognostic factors, and molecular subtypes were described, and the 60-month overall cumulative survival probabilities (OS) were estimated. From 2011 to 2013, 1,300 eligible Latin-American women 18 years or older, with a diagnosis of breast cancer in clinical stage II or III, and performance status ≦̸1 were invited to participate in a prospective cohort study. Face-to-face interviews were conducted, and clinical and outcome data, including death, were extracted from medical records. Unadjusted associations were evaluated by Chi-squared and Fisher's exact tests and the OS by Kaplan-Meier method. Log-rank test was used to determine differences between cumulative probability curves. Multivariable adjustment was carried out by entering potential confounders in the Cox regression model. The OS at 60 months was 83.9%. Multivariable-adjusted death hazard differences were found for women living in Argentina (2.27), Chile (1.95), and Uruguay (2.42) compared with Mexican women, for older (≥60 years) (1.84) compared with younger (≤40 years) women, for basal-like subtype (5.8), luminal B (2.43), and HER2-enriched (2.52) compared with luminal A subtype, and for tumor clinical stages IIB (1.91), IIIA (3.54), and IIIB (3.94) compared with stage IIA women. OS was associated with country of residence, PAM50 intrinsic subtype, age, and tumor stage at diagnosis. While the latter is known to be influenced by access to care, including cancer screening, timely diagnosis and treatment, including access to more effective treatment protocols, it may also influence epigenetic changes that, potentially, impact molecular subtypes. Data derived from heretofore understudied populations with unique geographic ancestry and sociocultural experiences are critical to furthering our understanding of this complexity.

Keywords: Latin America; breast cancer; global excellence; molecular subtypes; oncology; prognosis; risk factors.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Overall cumulative survival probabilities for Latin American women with breast cancer by country of residence and PAM50 intrinsic subtype.

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