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    Method of contraception and risk of ovarian cancer data
    (Elsevier Inc, 2021-12) Chesang J; Richardson A; Potter J; Sneyd M; Coope P
    The data presented here were obtained for a New Zealand nationwide population-based case-control analysis undertaken to assess the association between ovarian cancer and depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA), intrauterine contraceptive devices (IUDs), and vasectomy of a woman's sexual partner (Chesang et al., 2021). The research involved women aged 35 to 69 years. Controls were randomly selected from the New Zealand electoral roll. Cases were women with a diagnosis of incident ovarian cancer recruited from the New Zealand Cancer Registry and had to be listed on the electoral roll. Data collection was conducted between 1st May 2013 and 31st October, 2015. A structured postal questionnaire was used to gather information. Data were analysed using IBM Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (IBM SPSS statistics 22). Odds ratios adjusted for age were calculated using the method of Mantel and Haensze (Rosner et al., 2007). For multivariable analyses, binary logistic regression was used. Description of study participants and age-adjusted and multivariable analyses of the association between ever-use and specifics of use of DMPA, IUDs, and vasectomy were presented in a journal article (Chesang et al., 2021). Here, we present data from analyses of the risk of ovarian cancer by histological type associated with the use of DMPA, IUDs and ever having had a vasectomised partner. In addition, analyses assessing the association between ovarian cancer and these contraceptives restricted to ever-users and never-users of hormonal contraceptives (defined as oral contraceptives or DMPA) are presented. Data from analyses of the association between history of tubal ligation and the risk of ovarian cancer are also presented. These data, including the findings of a related study (Chesang et al., 2021) and the raw data, can be included in a collaborative analysis of existing studies undertaken to assess the association between IUDs, long-acting progestogen-based contraceptives, and partner vasectomy and the risk of ovarian cancer.
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    Characteristics of ovarian cancer in women residing in Aotearoa, New Zealand: 1993-2004
    (BMJ Journals, 2009) Firestone RT; Wong KC; Ellison Loschmann EA; Pearce NE; Jeffreys M
    Background: Few studies have compared ovarian cancer rates between different ethnic groups in the same country. The aim of this study was to describe ethnic patterns in the incidence and mortality of ovarian cancer in New Zealand, and to investigate ethnic and socioeconomic differences in the grade and stage of ovarian cancer. Methods: Data on all women registered with ovarian cancer on the New Zealand Cancer Registry (1993-2004) were analysed. Population data were taken from the 1996 and 2001 census. Logistic regression was used to estimate associations between ethnicity, deprivation and tumour characteristics. Results: Age-standardised incidence rates were highest in Pacific women, intermediate in Māori women, and lowest in non-Māori, non-Pacific women. Age-standardised mortality rates showed the same pattern. Ovarian cancer subtypes differed by ethnic group. There was no significant association between socioeconomic deprivation and tumour grade or stage. Age-adjusted models showed that Māori women were more likely to have well-differentiated tumours and less likely to present at a later stage compared to non-Māori, non-Pacific women. These patterns were partly explained by socioeconomic deprivation, and were not apparent for Pacific women. Conclusions: Pacific and Māori women experience higher incidence of ovarian cancer and mortality, compared to non-Māori, non-Pacific women. Māori women seemed to have better prognostic factors (local stage and well-differentiated tumours) than non-Māori, non-Pacific women. More work is needed to improve current cancer prevention strategies, particularly in Pacific women.