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Ageism and surgical treatment of breast cancer in Italian hospitals

Authors :
Emilia Prospero
Fabrizia Lattanzio
Andrea Corsonello
Valerio Mattia Scandali
Carlos Chiatti
Joseph M. Rimland
Mirko Di Rosa
Marina Capasso
Source :
Aging Clinical and Experimental Research. 30:139-144
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2017.

Abstract

To determine if age is a factor influencing the type of breast cancer surgery (radical versus conservative) in Italy and to investigate the regional differences in breast cancer surgery clinical practice. Retrospective study is based on national hospital discharge records. The study draws on routinely collected data from hospital discharge records in Italy in 2010. The following exclusion criteria were applied: day hospital stays, patients younger than 17 years, males, patients without an ICD-9CM code indicating breast cancer and breast surgery, and repeated hospital admission of the same patient. Overall, 49,058 patient records were selected for the analysis. The proportion of conservative breast cancer operations was 70.9%. A greater number of women younger than 70 had undergone a breast-conserving operation compared to older women. There were regional variations ranging from a minimum in Basilicata to a maximum in Val d’Aosta. Multivariate analysis revealed that older patients with lower clinical severity were more likely to have undergone a radical operation than younger women. In addition, radical surgery was approximately twice as likely to occur in a private hospital that performed at least 50 breast cancer operations annually than in a public hospital that performed

Details

ISSN :
17208319
Volume :
30
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Aging Clinical and Experimental Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....aed42dfceb6addc874460a2b6b10728f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40520-017-0757-0