AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates factors affecting the time between breast cancer diagnosis and surgery, highlighting that a longer wait can impact survival rates.
  • Data from a cancer registry was analyzed, revealing that 43.4% of patients had surgery more than 30 days post-diagnosis.
  • Results show that while delays are common, waiting more than 60 days significantly increases the risk of cancer recurrence or death, especially in older patients or those with advanced disease stages.

Article Abstract

Background: Multiple factors influence the time elapsed between diagnosis of breast cancer and surgical extirpation of the primary tumor. The disease-free interval between resection of primary breast cancer and first evidence of recurrence is predictive of mortality. We aimed to determine patient, disease, and treatment factors associated with a delay in time to surgery (TTS) and identify the point when prolonged TTS negatively impacts disease-free survival.

Patients And Methods: Cancer registry and electronic medical record data for patients with breast cancer who underwent surgery as first course of treatment during 2006-2016 were retrospectively reviewed. Patients undergoing surgery in ≤30 vs. 31-60 vs. >60 days of initial diagnosis were compared. Kaplan-Meier survival analyses with Cox proportional hazards were performed to evaluate impact of time from breast cancer diagnosis to definitive therapeutic surgery on breast cancer recurrence or death (all-cause).

Results: Overall, 4462 patients were analyzed, 43.4% of whom underwent surgery beyond 30 days. The following factors were associated with TTS >30 days: age <50, non-Hispanic White race/ethnicity, commercial or health exchange/Medicaid insurance, diagnosis of noninvasive disease (i.e., ductal carcinoma in situ), had breast magnetic resonance imaging before definitive surgery, underwent total mastectomy (especially if immediate reconstruction, particularly if autologous, was performed), and did not receive adjuvant therapies (P < .001 for all). After adjusting for relevant variables, significant predictors of recurrence/death included a TTS >60 days, increased patient age, higher breast cancer stage, and triple-negative biomarker expression.

Conclusion: Risk of recurrence or death is not compromised until TTS exceeds 60 days after initial breast cancer diagnosis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.clbc.2021.04.012DOI Listing

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