Singareeka Raghavendra Akshara, Kypriotakis George, Karam-Hage Maher, Kim Seokhun, Jizzini Mazen, Seoudy Kareem S, Robinson Jason D, Barcenas Carlos H, Cinciripini Paul M, Tripathy Debu, Ibrahim Nuhad K
Department of Breast Medical Oncology, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Department of Behavioral Science, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Cancers (Basel). 2022 Mar 12;14(6):1464. doi: 10.3390/cancers14061464.
Smoking negatively affects overall survival after successful breast cancer (BC) treatment. We hypothesized that smoking cessation would improve survival outcomes of BC patients who were smokers at the time of diagnosis.
This was a retrospective analysis of self-identified smokers with BC treated at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. Patient demographics, date of diagnosis, tumor stage, tobacco treatment program (TP) participation, and time to death were extracted from our departmental databases and institutional electronic health records. We examined associations between tobacco abstinence status and survival using survival models, with and without interactions, adjusted for personal characteristics and biomarkers of disease.
Among all 31,069 BC patients treated at MD Anderson between 2006 and 2017, we identified 2126 smokers (6.8%). From those 2126 self-identified smokers, 665 participated in the TP, reporting a conservative estimate of 31% abstinence (intent-to-treat) 9 months into the program. Patients without reported follow-up abstinence status (including TP and non-TP participants) were handled in the analyses as smokers. Survival analysis controlled for multiple factors, including disease characteristics and participation in the TP, indicated that abstainers were more likely to be alive with no evidence of disease compared to non-abstainers (HR, 0.593; 95% CI, 0.386-0.911; = 0.017).
Our results suggest that quitting smoking is associated with improved survival among BC patients who were smokers at time of diagnosis across all tumor stages. Comprehensive approaches for smoking cessation in patients diagnosed with BC may prolong survival when started as early as the time of diagnosis.
吸烟对乳腺癌(BC)治疗成功后的总生存期有负面影响。我们假设戒烟可改善诊断时为吸烟者的BC患者的生存结局。
这是一项对在德克萨斯大学MD安德森癌症中心接受治疗的自我认定为吸烟者的BC患者的回顾性分析。从我们部门的数据库和机构电子健康记录中提取患者人口统计学信息、诊断日期、肿瘤分期、烟草治疗项目(TP)参与情况以及死亡时间。我们使用生存模型研究了戒烟状态与生存之间的关联,包括有无相互作用,并对个人特征和疾病生物标志物进行了调整。
在2006年至2017年期间在MD安德森接受治疗的所有31069例BC患者中,我们确定了2126名吸烟者(6.8%)。在这2126名自我认定的吸烟者中,665人参与了TP,据报告在项目进行9个月时保守估计戒断率为31%(意向性治疗)。未报告随访戒断状态的患者(包括TP参与者和非TP参与者)在分析中被视为吸烟者。多因素生存分析表明,与未戒烟者相比,戒烟者更有可能存活且无疾病证据(HR,0.593;95%CI,0.386 - 0.911;P = 0.017),该分析控制了多种因素,包括疾病特征和参与TP情况。
我们的结果表明,戒烟与所有肿瘤分期诊断时为吸烟者的BC患者生存改善相关。对于诊断为BC的患者,尽早开始全面的戒烟方法可能会延长生存期。