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Comparison of active and cancer registry-based follow-up for breast cancer in a prospective cohort study
- Source :
- American journal of epidemiology. 149(4)
- Publication Year :
- 1999
-
Abstract
- The authors compared the relative effectiveness of two distinct follow-up designs in prospective cohort studies--the active approach, based on direct contact with study subjects, and the passive approach, based on record linkages with population-based cancer registries--utilizing available information from the New York University Women's Health Study (WHS) and the New York State Cancer Registry (NYSCR). The analyses were limited to breast cancer cases identified during the period 1985-1992, for which follow-up was considered reasonably complete by both the WHS and the NYSCR. Among 12,947 cohort members who reported a New York State address, 303 pathologically confirmed cases were identified through active follow-up and 284 through record linkage. Sixty-three percent of cancers were identified by both sources, 21% by the WHS only, and 16% by the NYSCR only. The agreement was appreciably better for invasive cancers. The percentage of cases identified only by the NYSCR was increased among subjects whose active follow-up was incomplete, as well as among nonwhites, obese patients, and parous patients. This suggests that relying on either type of follow-up alone may introduce certain biases in evaluating risk factors for breast cancer. Combining both approaches appears to be a better strategy in prospective cohort studies.
- Subjects :
- Adult
medicine.medical_specialty
Epidemiology
New York
Breast Neoplasms
Cohort Studies
Breast cancer
Bias
Internal medicine
medicine
Humans
Prospective Studies
Registries
Prospective cohort study
Aged
business.industry
Data Collection
Cancer
Reproducibility of Results
Retrospective cohort study
Middle Aged
medicine.disease
Surgery
Cancer registry
Risk factors for breast cancer
Cohort
Medical Record Linkage
business
Cohort study
Follow-Up Studies
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00029262
- Volume :
- 149
- Issue :
- 4
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- American journal of epidemiology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....b7d8b38472c095d3ada6ff0155235799