Time from diagnosis to surgical treatment of breast cancer: Factors influencing delays in initiating treatment

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Abstract

No clear guidelines exist defining the appropriate time frame from diagnosis to definitive surgical treatment of breast cancer. Studies have suggested that treatment delays greater than 90 days may be associated with stage migration. We sought to evaluate demographic factors that influence 30-day and 90-day benchmarks for time from diagnosis to definitive surgical treatment of breast cancer. Between 2004 and 2007, 19,896 women with stage I to III invasive breast cancer were treated with primary surgical therapy and did not receive preoperative systemic therapy in the California Cancer Registry. Overall, 75.7 per cent of patients were treated within 30 days of diagnosis, and 95.5 per cent of patients were treated within 90 days of diagnosis. Multivariate analyses revealed that treatment delays were associated with smaller tumor size, use of total mastectomy, lower socioeconomic status, and Hispanic and nonHispanic black race/ethnicity. Furthermore, disparities in those that did not meet 30-day benchmark timeframes were exaggerated with 90-day treatment delays. These benchmarks can be used to measure disparities in health care delivery.

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Wright, G. P., Wong, J. H., Morgan, J. W., Roy-Chowdhury, S., Kazanjian, K., & Lum, S. S. (2010). Time from diagnosis to surgical treatment of breast cancer: Factors influencing delays in initiating treatment. American Surgeon, 76(10), 1119–1122. https://doi.org/10.1177/000313481007601022

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