Issue: May 10, 2015
March 03, 2015
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One-third of patients do not receive recommended post-mastectomy radiation

Issue: May 10, 2015
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Only 65% of women with breast cancer whose disease spread to four or more nearby lymph nodes underwent recommended radiation therapy after mastectomy, according to study results.

Perspective from Katharine A. Yao, MD

“My colleagues and I were quite startled by the finding that a third of patients with N2/N3 disease did not receive post-mastectomy radiation therapy, which is the standard of care,” Quyen D. Chu, MD, MBA, FACS, professor of surgery at Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, said in a press release. “From this study, we could not tease out whether patients refuse treatment or there is a lack of awareness among women and physicians about the need for radiation therapy after mastectomy for locally advanced breast cancer. If women with N2/N3 breast cancer who plan a mastectomy are not offered post-mastectomy radiation therapy, they should ask their physician why.”

Quyen D. Chu, MD, MBA, FACS

Quyen D. Chu

Chu and colleagues used the National Cancer Data Base to identify 56,990 women diagnosed with N2/N3 breast cancer between 1998 and 2011. The median age of the population was 57 years (range, 19-90). The majority of women were non-Hispanic white (80.9%), had health insurance (96.1%) and had no comorbidities (83.1%). Most women in the study population were underwent treatment at a comprehensive community cancer program (59%) and resided in an urban community (97.8%).

After undergoing mastectomy, 82.1% of women received chemotherapy, 64.8% received radiation therapy and 51.3% received hormonal therapy.

The receipt of post-mastectomy radiation therapy was not significantly associated with facility type or location, race/ethnicity, insurance status, income and education levels, population density, comorbidities, histology, N-stage, T-stage, lymphovascular invasion, surgical margin status, or curative vs. palliative surgical intent.

Results of multiple logistic regression analyses indicated post-mastectomy radiation therapy was only significantly associated with the receipt of chemotherapy (OR = 4.55; 95% CI, 4.26-4.85), hospital readmission within 30 days of surgical discharge (OR = 1.14; 95% CI, 1.03-1.27) and being alive 30 days after surgery (OR = 1.55; 95 CI, 1.02-2.36).

“This study highlights that despite landmark randomized, controlled trials demonstrating the importance of post-mastectomy radiation therapy for patients with N2/N3 disease, [more than] a third of patients failed to adhere to these recommended evidence-based guidelines,” Chu and colleagues wrote. “From a public policy perspective, understanding the reasons behind the lack of compliance will not only increase the compliance rate, but can also potentially improve outcomes for these high-risk patients.” – by Alexandra Todak

Disclosure: The researchers report no relevant financial disclosures.