Litcius/Paper detail

Risk of breast cancer-related death in women with a prior cancer

Fei Ji, Ci-Qiu Yang, Xiaoling Li, Liulu Zhang, Mei Yang, Jieqing Li, Hongfei Gao, Teng Zhu, Minyi Cheng, Weiping Li, Si-Yan Wu, Ailing Zhong, Kun Wang

2020Aging29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

-test and chi-square test. Fine and Gray's regression was used to evaluate the effect of treatments on breast cancer death. After propensity score matching (PSM), 9,845 pairs of patients with breast cancer as the prior or second cancer diagnosed between 2010 and 2011 were included as a second cohort. PSM-adjusted Kaplan-Meier and Cox hazards models were used to evaluate the impact of prior cancer on survival. The results showed that survivors of gynecologic cancers (e.g., ovarian cancer) had a higher risk of developing breast cancer than survivors of gastrointestinal and urinary tract cancers. More patients died of breast cancer than of prior urinary cancer (53.3% vs. 40%, P < 0.05) and melanoma (66.7% vs. 33.3%, P < 0.05). The ratio of breast cancer deaths to prior cancer deaths was significantly higher in patients with diagnoses interval ≥ 3 years than in those with the interval < 3 years (2.67 vs. 0.69, P < 0.001). Breast cancer-specific survival and overall survival rates were significantly lower in women with breast cancer as the second primary cancer than in those with breast cancer as the prior cancer, especially among hormone receptor-positive women. However, breast cancer treatment decreased the risk of breast cancer -specific death (hazard ratio = 0.695, 95% confidence interval: 0.586-0.725, P < 0.001). Breast cancer patients with prior cancers must be carefully considered for clinical trials.

Topics & Concepts

CancerBreast cancerMedicineOncologyObstetricsInternal medicineMultiple and Secondary Primary CancersCancer Risks and FactorsGenetic factors in colorectal cancer
Risk of breast cancer-related death in women with a prior cancer | Litcius