Abstract P3-08-06: Demographics of breast cancer in a cohort of Afro-Caribbean women

2015 
Objectives: In Latin America and the Caribbean, non – communicable chronic diseases are now the leading cause of premature mortality. The incidence of cancer has increased in the region as a result of population aging and growth but also as more people adopt lifestyle choices like smoking, physical inactivity, and ‘‘westernized’’ diets. In women, fertility factors such as decreased parity, earlier onset of menses and later age at time of first pregnancy are known epidemiologically to increase incidence of hereditary and sporadic breast cancer. Recently there has also been a strong link to a genetic etiology of the breast and ovarian cancer in the Bahamas (27% in unselected breast cancer cases). A study was designed to address the prevalence and spectrum of BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations in the Afro-Caribbean population. Methods: Demographic and clinical pathologic data was collected from 347 women of Afro-Caribbean decent. The cohort included women with breast cancer from the following countries: the Cayman Islands, Jamaica, Barbados, Dominica, Trinidad and Haiti. Summary statistics and t-tests and ANOVA were used to analyze population characteristics. A Bahamian mutation panel was created and detailed analyses of samples are ongoing. Results: The mean age of onset in the cohort is 48.1 yrs with a mean BMI of 27.7. 70% of breast cancer cases ER+ (n=241 informative cases) and in Jamaica 27% (n=105) of breast cancer cases were Her2+. 67.8% cases were diagnosed at stages II/III (n=90). TAH-BSO delayed invasive breast cancer from 48 to 53 years, p=0.005. Parity was a statistically significant factor (p Conclusions: This population-based study provides an insight into pattern of risk factors – both genetic and environmental of breast cancer incidence and subtype across the Caribbean. In conclusion 1) genetic causes of breast cancer appear rare outside of the Bahamas, 2) fertility factors appear important in the development of breast cancer, 3) TAH-BSO is common as both a form of contraception and because of the high incidence of fibroids in the Caribbean and it may be protective, 4) BMI may impact on breast cancer development and 5) screening mammography is rare and the vast majority of mammography performed is diagnostic in nature. Citation Format: Sophia HL George, Talia Donenberg, Mohammed Akbari, Cheryl Alexis, Gillian Wharfe, Sook Yin, Hedda Dyer, Theodore Turnquest, Vincent DeGennaro, Steven Narod, Judith Hurley. Demographics of breast cancer in a cohort of Afro-Caribbean women [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Thirty-Seventh Annual CTRC-AACR San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium: 2014 Dec 9-13; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2015;75(9 Suppl):Abstract nr P3-08-06.
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