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. 2021 Feb 23;15:1190. doi: 10.3332/ecancer.2021.1190

Table 3. Association between variables of interest and completeness of reporting (chi-squared test).

Variables of interest Complete
N (%)
Incomplete
N (%)
p value
Age category 0.3185
≤40 18 (6.79) 247 (93.21)
41–50 30 (9.17) 297 (90.83)
51–60 26 (11.11) 208 (88.89)
≥61 18 (11.11) 144 (88.89)
Sex 0.6396
Female 91 (9.15) 903 (90.85)
Male 1 (14.29) 6 (85.71)
Skill level 0.6044
Professional 30 (10.6) 253 (89.4)
Semi-skilled 5 (7.14) 65 (92.86)
Unskilled 40 (8.13) 452 (91.87)
Retired 9 (12.68) 62 (87.32)
Not applicable 8 (9.41) 77 (90.59)
Year of report 0.0262
Prior 2010 6 (4.23) 136 (95.77)
2011–14 35 (10.51) 298 (89.49)
2015–16 47 (12.24) 337 (87.76)
Report from Lagos 0.0005
No 13 (4.64) 267 (95.36)
Yes 71 (12.10) 516 (87.90)
Report produced by government sector 0.5429
No 49 (10.25) 429 (89.75)
Yes 35 (9.02) 353 (90.98)
Report produced by the laboratory at a teaching hospital 0.4662
No 55 (10.30) 479 (89.70)
Yes 29 (8.79) 301 (91.21)

Completeness is defined as a pathology report including five clinically relevant tumour features (tumour histology, tumour grade, laterality, ER/PR and HER2) completely documented for a biopsy specimen or seven tumour features (tumour size, tumour histology, tumour grade, laterality, ER/PR, HER2 and lymph node involvement) completely documented for a surgical specimen. Incompleteness is defined as report missing one or more tumour features for the pre-specified sample typesSample size: Complete (N = 92), Incomplete (N = 909)