Keating Nancy L, Landrum Mary Beth, Ayanian John Z, Winer Eric P, Guadagnoli Edward
Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
J Clin Oncol. 2003 Dec 15;21(24):4532-9. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2003.05.131.
Prior studies have documented variation in breast cancer treatment and care that does not follow guideline recommendations, particularly for elderly women. We assessed whether consultation with a medical oncologist before surgery was associated with use of definitive surgery, axillary node dissection, and type of surgery.
We conducted a retrospective cohort study of a population-based sample of 9,630 women aged > or = 66 years diagnosed with breast cancer during 1995 to 1996. We measured the adjusted proportion visiting a medical oncologist before surgery, identified factors associated with such visits, and assessed the association between visits with a medical oncologist and use of definitive surgery (mastectomy or breast-conserving surgery with radiation v breast-conserving surgery without radiation); axillary dissection; and breast-conserving surgery versus mastectomy among women undergoing definitive surgery.
Nineteen percent of women visited a medical oncologist before surgery; these women were younger, more often had larger or more poorly differentiated cancers, had more comorbid illnesses, and were treated more often at a teaching hospital (all P <.05). Women who saw a medical oncologist before surgery were more likely than others to undergo definitive surgery (adjusted odds ratio [OR], 1.28; 95% CI, 1.05 to 1.56) and axillary dissection (adjusted OR, 1.44; 95% CI, 1.19 to 1.73), but less likely to undergo breast-conserving surgery among women undergoing definitive surgery (OR, 0.84; 95% CI, 0.75 to 0.95).
Elderly women who consulted with a medical oncologist before surgery were more likely to receive guideline-recommended care. Additional research is needed allow a better understanding of the quality and content of discussions that elderly women have with various providers about breast-conserving surgery and mastectomy.
既往研究记录了乳腺癌治疗与护理存在不符合指南推荐的差异,尤其是老年女性。我们评估了术前咨询医学肿瘤学家是否与根治性手术的使用、腋窝淋巴结清扫及手术类型有关。
我们对1995年至1996年期间确诊为乳腺癌的9630名年龄≥66岁的基于人群样本的女性进行了一项回顾性队列研究。我们测量了术前咨询医学肿瘤学家的校正比例,确定与此类咨询相关的因素,并评估咨询医学肿瘤学家与根治性手术(乳房切除术或保乳手术加放疗与单纯保乳手术)的使用、腋窝清扫以及接受根治性手术的女性中保乳手术与乳房切除术之间的关联。
19%的女性在术前咨询了医学肿瘤学家;这些女性更年轻,更常患有更大或分化更差的癌症,有更多合并症,且更常在教学医院接受治疗(所有P<.05)。术前咨询医学肿瘤学家的女性比其他女性更有可能接受根治性手术(校正比值比[OR],1.28;95%可信区间[CI],1.05至1.56)和腋窝清扫(校正OR,1.44;95%CI,1.19至1.73),但在接受根治性手术的女性中接受保乳手术的可能性较小(OR,0.84;95%CI,0.75至0.95)。
术前咨询医学肿瘤学家的老年女性更有可能接受指南推荐的护理。需要进一步研究以更好地了解老年女性与不同医疗服务提供者就保乳手术和乳房切除术进行讨论的质量和内容。