Medical Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Population Health Sciences, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, New York, USA.
BMJ Open. 2024 Jul 1;14(6):e081157. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-081157.
Compared with older women diagnosed with breast cancer, younger women are more likely to die of breast cancer and more likely to suffer psychosocially in both the short-term and long term. The Young Women's Breast Cancer Study (YWS) is a multisite prospective cohort study established to address gaps in our knowledge about this vulnerable and understudied population.
The YWS enrolled 1302 women newly diagnosed with stages 0-IV breast cancer at age 40 years or younger at 13 academic and community sites in North America between 2006 and 2016. Longitudinal patient-reported outcome data are complemented by clinical data abstraction and biospecimen collection at multiple timepoints.
Key findings related to fertility include that nearly 40% of participants were interested in pregnancy following diagnosis; of those who reported interest, 10% pursued fertility preservation. Overall, approximately 10% of YWS participants became pregnant in the first 5 years after diagnosis; follow-up is ongoing for pregnancies after 5 years. Studies focused on psychosocial outcomes have characterised quality of life, post-traumatic stress and fear of recurrence, with findings detailing the factors associated with the substantial psychosocial burden many young women face during and following active treatment. Multiple studies have leveraged YWS biospecimens, including whole-exome sequencing of tumour analyses that revealed that select somatic alterations occur at different frequencies in young (age≤35) versus older women with luminal A breast cancer, and a study that explored clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential found it to be rare in young survivors.
With a median follow-up of approximately 10 years, the cohort is just maturing for many relevant long-term outcomes and provides outstanding opportunities to further study and build collaborations to address gaps in our knowledge, with the ultimate objective to improve care and outcomes for young women with breast cancer.
NCT01468246.
与被诊断患有乳腺癌的老年女性相比,年轻女性更有可能死于乳腺癌,并且在短期和长期内更有可能遭受心理社会问题的困扰。年轻女性乳腺癌研究(YWS)是一项多中心前瞻性队列研究,旨在解决我们对这一脆弱和研究不足人群的知识空白。
YWS 于 2006 年至 2016 年期间在北美 13 个学术和社区站点招募了 1302 名年龄在 40 岁及以下、被诊断为 0-IV 期乳腺癌的女性。纵向患者报告结果数据辅以多个时间点的临床数据提取和生物样本收集。
与生育力相关的关键发现包括,近 40%的参与者在诊断后对怀孕感兴趣;在有兴趣的参与者中,10%选择了生育力保存。总体而言,大约 10%的 YWS 参与者在诊断后 5 年内怀孕;5 年后的妊娠情况仍在继续。专注于心理社会结果的研究描述了生活质量、创伤后应激和对复发的恐惧,研究结果详细说明了许多年轻女性在积极治疗期间和之后所面临的巨大心理社会负担的相关因素。多项研究利用了 YWS 生物样本,包括肿瘤全外显子测序分析,结果显示某些体细胞改变在年轻(年龄≤35 岁)和老年 luminal A 乳腺癌患者中发生的频率不同,一项探索不确定潜在意义的克隆性造血的研究发现,年轻幸存者中这种情况很少见。
该队列的中位随访时间约为 10 年,许多相关的长期结果刚刚成熟,为进一步研究和建立合作提供了极好的机会,以解决我们知识中的空白,最终目标是改善年轻乳腺癌患者的护理和结果。
NCT01468246。