Litcius/Paper detail

Influence of Competing Risks on Estimates of Recurrence Risk and Breast Cancer-specific Mortality in Analyses of the Early Breast Cancer Trialists Collaborative Group

Ramy Saleh, Michelle B. Nadler, Alexandra Desnoyers, Danielle Rodin, Husam Abdel‐Qadir, Eitan Amir

2020Scientific Reports15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Early-stage breast cancer (BC) is a curable disease with many patients dying of causes other than BC. The influence of non-BC death and other competing risks on the interpretation of Kaplan-Meier (KM)-based analyses for BC-specific outcomes are unknown. We searched the Oxford University website to identify all meta-analyses published by the Early Breast Cancer Trialists Collaborative Group (EBCTCG) between 2005 and 2018. The potential influence of competing risks was estimated using a validated multivariable linear model that predicts the difference between KM and cumulative incidence function (CIF) on estimates of BC-specific outcomes. The initial search identified 14 EBCTCG papers, 10 (71%) reported data on BC and competing events. Eight (80%) had a relative difference between KM and the competing risk adjusted estimates exceeding 10%. The median relative difference was 28.4% for local-recurrence; 16.8% for distant-recurrence, and 6.7% for BC-specific mortality. There was a 18.9% relative difference between KM and CIF adjusted analyses beyond 10 years. The use of KM-based methods when competing risks are present biases risk estimates in studies of early BC especially for uncommon outcomes such as local recurrence. The use of CIF to calculate BC-specific outcomes may be preferable in this setting.

Topics & Concepts

Breast cancerMedicineRelative riskIncidence (geometry)Cumulative incidenceCancerInternal medicineDemographyOncologyDiseaseConfidence intervalCohortOpticsPhysicsSociologyBreast Cancer Treatment StudiesGlobal Cancer Incidence and ScreeningCancer Risks and Factors