Development in incidence of breast cancer in non-screened Danish women, 1973-2002 - A population-based study

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Abstract

The authors report on the incidence rates of breast cancer overall and by histology in a population of unscreened women constituting ∼80% of the total population of women in Denmark from 1973-2002, utilizing the tiles of the nationwide Danish Cancer Registry. The age-specific incidence rates of breast cancer increased throughout the period, and further, marked changes in the age-specific incidence pattern were observed, where the plateau and change of slope around the age of 46-48 in 1973-1981 shifted to around age 64-66 years in 1994-2002. Age-period-cohort modeling indicated that these changes were not attributable to a birth cohort effect. Although lobular breast cancer incidence increased more than ductal breast cancer incidence, this was only observed in the first decade after the introduction of the ICD-O system in Denmark and probably is attributable to this, whereas we observed no disproportionate changes by histology in any age group from 1988-2002. Thus, previous reports of a disproportionate increase in lobular breast cancer could not be confirmed in a non-screened population, whereas important changes over the past decade in the age-specific incidence pattern of breast cancer particular around the time of menopause were indicated. © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Fuglede, N., Langballe, O., Svendsen, A. L., Tjønneland, A., Dalton, S. O., & Johansen, C. (2006). Development in incidence of breast cancer in non-screened Danish women, 1973-2002 - A population-based study. International Journal of Cancer, 118(9), 2366–2369. https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.21654

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