4.5 Article

Survival outcomes for breast conserving surgery versus mastectomy among elderly women with breast cancer

Journal

BREAST CANCER RESEARCH AND TREATMENT
Volume 196, Issue 1, Pages 67-74

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10549-022-06725-x

Keywords

Breast cancer; The elderly; Breast conserving surgery; Mastectomy; Overall survival; SEER; Propensity score matching

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The study aimed to compare the efficacy of breast conserving surgery (BCS) and mastectomy in elderly breast cancer patients, and found that the two surgical procedures were comparable in overall survival rate after being matched by clinicopathologic features.
Purpose Elderly patients have different physical condition and tumor biology of breast cancer. Surgical choices for older patients are complicated and several studies have reported that breast conserving surgery (BCS) had better survival than mastectomy in different patient population. The major objective of this study was to compare the efficacy of BCS and mastectomy in the whole elderly cohort in SEER database. Methods Female patients aged over 70 years old and diagnosed with breast cancer between 2010 and 2015 were included from SEER database. Propensity score matching (PSM) was used to establish a cohort composing of similar characteristics. We compared the overall survival (OS) among patients undergoing BCS and mastectomy. Kaplan-Meier analysis and Cox proportional regression model were used to evaluate the associated factors of survival outcome. Results Of 44,755 eligible patients, 30,375 (67.9%) patients underwent BCS and 14,380 (32.1%) patients underwent mastectomy. After PSM, 7222 patients in each group were analyzed and there was no significant difference between BCS and mastectomy in terms of the OS rate (85.8% in BCS group and 85.0% in mastectomy group, p = 0.135). Multivariable analysis also indicated that no significant difference between two surgical procedures after adjusting for covariates in matched cohort (HR 1.062, 95% CI 0.997-1.132, p = 0.063). Subgroup analysis demonstrated that postoperative radiotherapy and chemotherapy contributed to the survival benefit of BCS compared to mastectomy (p < 0.05). Conclusion For elderly breast cancer patients, BCS and mastectomy appeared to be comparable in terms of OS after being matched by clinicopathologic features. While our findings suggested that there was statistically survival benefit of BCS in some subsets of patients, including radiotherapy, chemotherapy, and 80-84 year-old subgroups, these results were likely to be related to selection bias and should be interpreted with caution. Thus, for this elderly patient population, BCS should be considered as an equivalent and less aggressive alternative to mastectomy.

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