Corkum Joseph P, Butler Kate, Zhong Toni
Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation (IHPME), University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open. 2020 Feb 27;8(2):e2636. doi: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000002636. eCollection 2020 Feb.
Distress among newly diagnosed patients with breast cancer is common and may have an impact on their surgical decision-making. The revised Edmonton Symptom Assessment System (ESAS-r) is a validated instrument that provides an estimate of patients' total distress, and no previous study has related preoperative scores to the choice to have breast reconstruction.
Women with breast cancer treated at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre in 2014 were reviewed, and patient and tumor characteristics were collected from local databases. Breast reconstruction status was obtained from patients' electronic medical records until April 2017. A multivariable logistic regression model assessed for an independent association between preoperative ESAS-r total distress scores and patients' decision to have breast reconstruction.
A total of 312 patients were analyzed. ESAS-r values had an overall median score of 10.0 and ranged from 0 to 69 (interquartile range, 17). Of these patients, 82 chose to undergo breast reconstruction surgery (26.8%). Multivariable logistic regression analysis showed that higher ESAS-r scores were associated with patients forgoing breast reconstruction surgery (lumpectomy-alone group: odds ratio estimate, 1.034 [1.004-1.064], = 0.025; mastectomy-alone group: odds ratio estimate, 1.031 [1.004-1.059], = 0.023).
This study of patients with breast cancer found that higher distress scores as measured by the ESAS-r were associated with reduced breast reconstruction. Distress in patients with breast cancer is important to address, as it is often treatable, and its resolution may unmask a desire for breast reconstruction, which has known benefits psychosocially.
新诊断乳腺癌患者的痛苦很常见,可能会影响其手术决策。修订后的埃德蒙顿症状评估系统(ESAS-r)是一种经过验证的工具,可用于评估患者的总体痛苦程度,此前尚无研究将术前评分与乳房重建的选择联系起来。
回顾了2014年在玛格丽特公主癌症中心接受治疗的乳腺癌女性患者,并从本地数据库收集了患者和肿瘤特征。直到2017年4月,从患者的电子病历中获取乳房重建状态。采用多变量逻辑回归模型评估术前ESAS-r总体痛苦评分与患者进行乳房重建决策之间的独立关联。
共分析了312例患者。ESAS-r值的总体中位数为10.0,范围为0至69(四分位间距为17)。在这些患者中,82例选择接受乳房重建手术(26.8%)。多变量逻辑回归分析显示,ESAS-r评分越高,患者放弃乳房重建手术的可能性越大(单纯乳房肿块切除术组:比值比估计值为1.034[1.004-1.064],P=0.025;单纯乳房切除术组:比值比估计值为1.031[1.004-1.059],P=0.023)。
这项对乳腺癌患者的研究发现,ESAS-r测量的较高痛苦评分与乳房重建减少有关。乳腺癌患者的痛苦很重要,因为它通常是可以治疗的,解决痛苦可能会揭示患者对乳房重建的渴望,而乳房重建在心理社会方面有已知的益处。