We examined the role of palliative chemotherapy and the shift from anticancer therapy to palliative care in 30 patients who had died of advanced or recurrent breast cancer. Patients who received more than four chemotherapy regimens had a longer survival and started analgesics later than those who received less than three regimens. In addition, median survival time was prolonged in patients treated with both anthracycline- and taxane-containing regimens. Presence of bone metastases did not influence survival time, but extended the period of last hospitalization. In the average process of advanced or recurrent breast cancer, use of analgesics was started on the 500 th day and the last hospitalization was on the 760 th day from the diagnosis. Last chemotherapy was performed 29 days before death, and the median survival length was 811 days. Patients were treated as outpatients in 94% of the period from their recurrence until death. Therefore, it is especially important to support outpatients physically and mentally from the early stage of recurrence.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

advanced recurrent
12
recurrent breast
12
palliative chemotherapy
8
chemotherapy shift
8
shift anticancer
8
anticancer therapy
8
therapy palliative
8
palliative care
8
care patients
8
breast cancer
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!