4.6 Article

Anemia requiring transfusion in breast cancer patients on dose-dense chemotherapy: Prevalence, risk factors, cost and effect on disease outcome

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SUPPORTIVE CARE IN CANCER
卷 30, 期 6, 页码 5519-5526

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00520-022-06970-2

关键词

Anemia; Dose-dense chemotherapy; Breast cancer

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This study investigated the prevalence of chemotherapy-related anemia and the associated risk factors in Indian breast cancer patients receiving dose-dense chemotherapy. The results showed that anemia is a common complication of dose-dense chemotherapy, leading to treatment delay and increased cost. Low-grade tumor, grade 3 or 4 thrombocytopenia, and grade 2 or higher anemia after two cycles of chemotherapy were identified as risk factors for blood transfusions during treatment.
Purpose Dose-dense chemotherapy improves survival but with increased toxicity and treatment-related cost. We report the prevalence of anemia and the possible risk factors associated with chemotherapy-related anemia and determine the cost and time-delay associated with transfusion requirement in Indian patients with non-metastatic breast cancer on dose-dense preoperative chemotherapy. Methods In this study, triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) patients were treated preoperatively with docetaxel and cyclophosphamide alternating with epirubicin and cisplatin every 2 weeks. Patients were evaluated for anemia pre- and post-chemotherapy. We examined trends in the red cell indices, transfusion requirement, time to transfusion, as well as risk factors associated with transfusion during treatment, along with delay in treatment due to anemia and the additional cost incurred. Results A total of 116 consecutive women with nonmetastatic TNBC were treated with preoperative chemotherapy. The median age was 44.5 years. 56.1% of patients had stage III disease. Anemia was detected at baseline in 54 (46.5%) patients with mild anemia (10-12 g/dl) in 42 (36.2%) patients and moderate anemia (8-10 g/dl) in 12 (10.3%) patients. During the course of treatment, all patients developed anemia. A total of 44 patients (37.9%) required transfusion during chemotherapy, with 55(47.4%) patients developing grade 1-2 anemia and 40 (34.5%) patients developing grade 3 anemia. The factors associated with anemia requiring transfusion were a steeper decline in hemoglobin after two cycles (OR 1.65, p = 0.02), low-grade tumor (OR 2.48, p = 0.03), and thrombocytopenia grade 3 or 4 (OR 4.35, p = 0.034), of which tumor grade and thrombocytopenia remained significant in multivariate analysis. Nearly one-fourth of the study population had a delay between two cycles of chemotherapy due to anemia. A median additional cost of INR 7000 was incurred among those requiring blood transfusion. Conclusion Anemia is a common toxicity associated with dose-dense chemotherapy during curative breast cancer treatment leading to delay in treatment and increased cost. Low-grade tumor, grade 3 or 4 thrombocytopenia, and grade 2 or higher anemia after two cycles of chemotherapy are risk factors for blood transfusions during treatment.

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