Journal article
Adherence to adjuvant hormonal therapy in localised breast cancer
European journal of cancer care, Vol.31(6), pp.e13729-n/a
11/01/2022
DOI: 10.1111/ecc.13729
PMID: 36207823
Abstract
Background Hormonal therapies are the cornerstone of systemic adjuvant treatment of oestrogen receptor (ER) positive breast cancer. The full benefit of this treatment is obtained with long-term adherence. However, discontinuation of hormonal therapy is common. Factors associated with non-compliance to therapy are complex and worth of detailed evaluation. Patients and Methods A retrospective analysis of medical records of 284 early ER-positive breast cancer patients prescribed adjuvant hormonal therapy during a 5-year period in a single centre was undertaken. Characteristics of the patients and their disease as well as adherence to therapy and continuation at 1 and 3 years were recorded. The group of patients that were on treatment at 3 years and the group that had discontinued therapy before 3 years were compared to identify differences predicting lack of adherence. Results The discontinuation rate of hormonal therapy at 1 year was 13%, and the discontinuation rate at 3 years was 21.2%. Patient age and menopause status were not associated with hormone therapy adherence at 3 years. The type of hormonal therapy (aromatase inhibitor or tamoxifen) was also not associated with adherence. In contrast, patients that received adjuvant chemotherapy before starting hormonal therapy had a higher adherence to hormonal therapy (86.9% at 3 years vs. 75.7% in patients that had not received adjuvant chemotherapy, chi(2) p = 0.04). Among co-morbidities, patients with a concomitant diagnosis of psychiatric disease at the time of breast cancer diagnosis were at increased risk of hormone therapy non-adherence. Progression-free survival and overall survival were inferior in the non-adherent group compared with the patients who continued their hormonal therapy at 3 years. Conclusion Adjuvant chemotherapy is associated with better subsequent adherence to hormonal therapy in early breast cancer patients. On the other hand, psychiatric co-morbidities are associated with worse adherence. De-escalation of adjuvant therapy guided by genomic tests leads to a significant percentage of early ER-positive breast cancer patients not receiving chemotherapy. Non-adherence to hormonal therapy would leave a subset of these patients with no adjuvant systemic therapy. The current results will guide efforts to increase compliance to hormonal therapies in specific groups of patients.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Adherence to adjuvant hormonal therapy in localised breast cancer
- Creators
- Steven Davies - Northern Ontario Sch Med, Sudbury, ON, CanadaIoannis A. Voutsadakis - Essar Steel Algoma
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- European journal of cancer care, Vol.31(6), pp.e13729-n/a
- Publisher
- Wiley
- DOI
- 10.1111/ecc.13729
- PMID
- 36207823
- ISSN
- 0961-5423
- eISSN
- 1365-2354
- Number of pages
- 8
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 11/01/2022
- Academic Unit
- Internal Medicine
- Record Identifier
- 9984806511302771
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