4.5 Article

Time to surgery among women treated with neoadjuvant systemic therapy and upfront surgery for breast cancer

Journal

BREAST CANCER RESEARCH AND TREATMENT
Volume 186, Issue 2, Pages 535-550

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10549-020-06012-7

Keywords

Breast cancer; Chemotherapy; Endocrine therapy; Neoadjuvant; Quality of care; Time to treatment

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [1K08CA241390]
  2. Duke Cancer Institute through NIH [P30CA014236]

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The time to surgery (TTS) is a modifiable factor associated with survival after breast cancer diagnosis, affected by factors such as surgery extent, race/ethnicity, and insurance. Delay in TTS is associated with worse overall survival (OS) in upfront-surgery patients, but not in those receiving neoadjuvant systemic therapy (NST).
Purpose Time to surgery (TTS) is a potentially modifiable factor associated with survival after breast cancer diagnosis and can serve as a proxy for quality of oncologic care coordination. We sought to determine whether factors associated with delays in TTS vary between patients who receive neoadjuvant systemic therapy (NST) vs upfront surgery and whether the impact of these delays on overall survival (OS) varies with treatment sequence. Methods Women >= 18 years old with Stage I-III breast cancer were identified in the National Cancer Database (2004-2014). Multivariate linear regression stratified by treatment sequence (upfront surgery vs NST [neoadjuvant chemotherapy {NAC}, neoadjuvant endocrine therapy {NAE}, or both {NACE}]) was used to identify factors associated with TTS. Cox proportional hazards models were used to estimate the effect of TTS on overall survival (OS). Results Of 693,469 patients, 14.8% (n = 102,326) received NST (NAC n = 85,143, NAE n = 10,004, NACE n = 7179). Non-White race/ethnicity, no or government-issued insurance, more extensive surgery (i.e., mastectomy and contralateral prophylactic mastectomy vs breast-conserving surgery), and post-mastectomy reconstruction were associated with significantly longer adjusted TTS for NAC and upfront-surgery recipients, but only upfront-surgery patients had progressively worse OS with increasing TTS (> 180 vs <= 30 days: HR = 1.31, all p < 0.001). Conclusions Surgery extent, race/ethnicity, and insurance were associated with TTS across treatment groups, but longer TTS was only associated with worse OS in upfront-surgery patients. Our findings can help inform surgeon-patient communication, shared decision making, care coordination, and patients' expectations throughout both NST and in the perioperative period.

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