Breast Cancer–Specific Survival and Prognostic Factors in a Statewide Oncology Network in Brazil: A Registry‐Linked Retrospective Cohort Study
Raphael Manhães Pessanha, Wesley Rocha Grippa, Luiz Cláudio Barreto Silva Neto, Naira Santos D'Agostini, Luís Carlos Lopes‐Júnior

TL;DR
This study examines breast cancer survival in Brazil, finding that survival rates are strongly linked to cancer stage and access to healthcare systems.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into breast cancer survival disparities in a Brazilian state using linked registry and mortality data.
Findings
Five-year survival rates ranged from 97% in stage I to 32% in stage IV breast cancer.
Women from the private healthcare system had a 17% lower risk of breast cancer mortality compared to those from the public system.
Advanced clinical stage and distant metastasis at diagnosis were the strongest predictors of mortality.
Abstract
Breast cancer survival varies widely across middle‐income settings and may be influenced by clinical stage at diagnosis and access pathways within oncology care networks. In Brazil, evidence from statewide cohorts using linked registry and mortality data remains limited. To investigate the association between clinical factors and breast cancer–specific survival among women treated in all hospitals comprising the Oncology Care Network of a state in Southeastern Brazil. A retrospective cohort study was conducted using data from the Hospital Cancer Registry linked to the state Mortality Information System. Women aged ≥ 18 years diagnosed with primary breast cancer (ICD‐10: C50.x) between 2000 and 2016 were included and followed until December 31, 2021. Five‐year breast cancer–specific survival was estimated using the Kaplan–Meier method, and factors associated with mortality were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Cancer Incidence and Screening · Breast Cancer Treatment Studies · Digital Radiography and Breast Imaging
