Breast cancer incidence rates in Slovenia 1971–1993
Open Access
- 1 December 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in International Journal of Epidemiology
- Vol. 29 (6) , 969-974
- https://doi.org/10.1093/ije/29.6.969
Abstract
Background Analyses of time trends in breast cancer incidence and mortality have generally revealed cohort-based changes in the rates. These have been linked to cohort-based changes in lifestyle factors. The effect of the changes in the reproductive risk factors on the changes in the rates, and the relative importance of the reproductive characteristics in Slovenia, a country which has not had much breast cancer screening, are investigated. Methods Data on breast cancer incidence for 1971–1993 were obtained from the Cancer Registry of Slovenia (Registry). The Registry covers the whole population of the Republic of Slovenia (1.99 million on 30 June 1993). The statistical analysis uses parametric age-period-cohort models. Results Breast cancer incidence has increased by 70% in Slovenia from 1971 to 1993, These changes are dominated by cohort effects and the cohorts born in 1907–1922 have the greatest increase in incidence. Period effects on changes in incidence were modest. The percentage of nulliparous women in the cohort and the average family size in the cohort explained 38% of the variation in the cohort effects. Conclusions The percentage of nulliparous women in the cohort is the most important reproductive variable associated with the trends in the rates, with breast cancer risk predicted to be higher in cohorts with a larger percentage of nulliparous women. As the cohorts born 1932–1946 have a more favourable reproductive pattern as regards breast cancer risk, compared to the 1907–1922 cohorts, age-specific incidence rates in Slovenia would be predicted to decline in the future in the absence of changes in the other risk factors.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Age-period-cohort analysis of chronic disease rates. I: modelling approachStatistics in Medicine, 1998
- Statistical modelling of breast cancer incidence and mortality rates in ScotlandBritish Journal of Cancer, 1997
- Birth Cohort and Calendar Period Trends in Breast Cancer Mortality in the United States and CanadaJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1997
- Breast cancer mortality rates are levelling off or beginning to decline in many western countries: analysis of time trends, age-cohort and age-period models of breast cancer mortality in 20 countriesBritish Journal of Cancer, 1996
- Evaluation of Birth Cohort Patterns in Population Disease RatesAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, 1996
- Breast‐cancer risk and oral contraceptive use in slovenian women aged 25 to 54International Journal of Cancer, 1995
- Recent trends in incidence of and mortality from breast, ovarian and endometrial cancers in England and Wales and their relation to changing fertility and oral contraceptive useBritish Journal of Cancer, 1995
- The effect of wartime conditions and the 1944–45 ‘Dutch Famine’ on recalled menarcheal age in participants of the DOM breast cancer screening projectAnnals of Human Biology, 1991
- A cohort analysis of breast cancer, uterine corpus cancer, and childbearing pattern in Norwegian women.Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1990
- Epidemiologic features of breast cancer in Slovenia, 1965–1967Published by Elsevier ,1971