- Author:
Yunhee CHOI
1
;
Yeonju KIM
;
Sue K PARK
;
Hai Rim SHIN
;
Keun Young YOO
Author Information
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords: Cohort effect; Breast neoplasms; Death; Linear models
- MeSH: Breast Neoplasms*; Breast*; Cohort Effect; Cohort Studies; Female*; Humans; Korea*; Linear Models; Mortality*; Parturition; Population Characteristics; Risk Factors
- From:Cancer Research and Treatment 2016;48(1):11-19
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:English
- Abstract: PURPOSE: Despite the low mortality rate of breast cancer among women in Korea, the breast cancer mortality rate has increased. The aim of this study was to examine trends in breast cancer mortality from 1983 to 2012 in Korea, assessing the importance of age, period, and birth cohort as risk factors. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Data on the annual number of deaths due to female breast cancer and on female population statistics from 1983 to 2012 were obtained from Statistics Korea. A log-linear Poisson age-period-cohort model was used to estimate age, period, and cohort effects. RESULTS: The increasing breast cancer mortality can be explained predominantly by a birth cohort effect: the risk of breast cancer death showed a steady increase until the 1968 birth cohort, and decreased thereafter. There was a sharp increase in the magnitude of the age effect up to 60 years old, then a moderate increase in the effect during the sixties, followed by another sharp increase from 70 years old. The period effect on breast cancer mortality seems negligible based on its adjusted relative risk, even though it was statistically significant after adjusting for age and cohort effects. CONCLUSION: In this study, the mortality pattern of breast cancer in Korea can be explained predominantly by a birth cohort effect. Hence, the overall mortality rate of breast cancer may increase for a while, and show a gradual decrease in the future, which will start from the younger age group.