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Chemotherapy decisions and patient experience with the recurrence score assay for early-stage breast cancer.

Authors :
Friese CR
Li Y
Bondarenko I
Hofer TP
Ward KC
Hamilton AS
Deapen D
Kurian AW
Katz SJ
Source :
Cancer [Cancer] 2017 Jan 01; Vol. 123 (1), pp. 43-51. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Oct 24.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Background: The 21-gene recurrence score (RS) assay stratifies early-stage, estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer by recurrence risk. Few studies have examined the ways in which physicians use the RS to recommend adjuvant systemic chemotherapy or patients' experiences with testing and decision making.<br />Methods: This study surveyed 3880 women treated for breast cancer in 2013-2014; they were identified from the Los Angeles County and Georgia Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results registries (response rate, 71%). Women reported chemotherapy recommendations, the receipt of chemotherapy, testing experiences, and decision satisfaction. Registries linked the tumor data, RS, and surveys. Regression models examined factors associated with chemotherapy recommendations and receipt by the RS and subgroups.<br />Results: There were 1527 patients with stage I/II, estrogen receptor/progesterone receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor 2-negative disease: 778 received an RS (62.6% of patients with node-negative, favorable disease, 24.3% of patients with node-negative, unfavorable disease, and 13.0% of patients with node-positive disease; Pā€‰<ā€‰.001). Overall, 47.2% of the patients received a recommendation against chemotherapy, and 40.5% received a recommendation for it. RS results correlated with recommendations: nearly all patients with high scores (31-100) received a chemotherapy recommendation (86.9%-96.5% across clinical subgroups), whereas the majority of the patients with low-risk results (0-18) received a recommendation against it (65.9%-78.2% across subgroups). Most patients with high RSs received chemotherapy (87.0%, 91.1%, and 100% across subgroups), whereas few patients with low scores received it (2.9%, 9.5%, and 26.6% across subgroups). There were no substantial racial/ethnic differences in testing or treatment. Women were largely satisfied with the RS and chemotherapy decisions.<br />Conclusions: Oncologists use the RS to personalize treatment, even for those with node-positive disease. High satisfaction and an absence of disparities in testing and treatment suggest that precision-medicine advances have improved systemic breast cancer treatment. Cancer 2017;43-51. © 2016 American Cancer Society.<br /> (© 2016 American Cancer Society.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1097-0142
Volume :
123
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
27775837
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.30324