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Histological types of invasive breast cancer in 830,000 women diagnosed in England during 1988–2016
Histological types of invasive breast cancer in 830,000 women diagnosed in England during 1988–2016
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Histological types of invasive breast cancer in 830,000 women diagnosed in England during 1988–2016
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Histological types of invasive breast cancer in 830,000 women diagnosed in England during 1988–2016
Histological types of invasive breast cancer in 830,000 women diagnosed in England during 1988–2016
Journal Article

Histological types of invasive breast cancer in 830,000 women diagnosed in England during 1988–2016

2025
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Overview
Breast cancer can be categorised into a number of histological types, based on microscopic appearances. There is some evidence that the different breast cancer histological types are associated with different patient and tumour characteristics, but few previous studies have been large enough to investigate this systematically, especially for rare histological types. National cancer registration data were used to describe trends in the incidence of specific histological types of invasive breast cancer in women diagnosed when aged 18–89 years in England from January 1988 to December 2016, and to investigate associations between breast cancer histological types and patient and tumour characteristics. There were 838,776 women diagnosed with a first primary invasive breast cancer in this 29‐year period, including 614,698 (73%) cases of ductal carcinoma NST [no special type (NST)], 90,028 (11%) cases of lobular carcinoma, and more than 16,000 (2%) cases each of tubular and mucinous carcinomas. Rarer histological types included medullary, papillary, metaplastic, and cribriform carcinomas, with >1000 cases of each type. Data quality and completeness improved substantially during the study period. The different histological types of breast cancer showed different patterns in incidence by calendar period of diagnosis, age at diagnosis, and screen‐detection status, as well as different associations with tumour characteristics such as grade, stage at diagnosis, and molecular subtype. This large nationwide study provides an overview of the changing incidence of the different histological types of invasive breast cancer in England over almost 30 years. It also gives an opportunity to investigate the characteristics of rare histological types, which smaller studies have been unable to explore. In addition, the results demonstrate the continuing value of histological types defined by microscopic morphology, alongside newer molecular classifications.