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The impact of breast reconstruction on the delivery of chemotherapy
Authors
Alderman
Alderman
+32 more
Alderman
Alderman
Allweis
Atisha
Balasubramanian
Caffo
Chang
Christian
Cold
Dean
Ghafoor
Gorin
Gouy
Greenberg
Kronowitz
Lohrisch
Morrow
Mortenson
Motwani
Noone
Rainsbury
Rey
Rosenqvist
Spear
Stevens
Taylor
Wanzel
Wellisch
Wilkins
Wilson
Winn
Yeh
Publication date
1 April 2010
Publisher
'Wiley'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of postmastectomy breast reconstruction on the timing of chemotherapy. METHODS: The authors included stage I-III breast cancer patients from 8 National Comprehensive Cancer Network institutions for whom guidelines recommended chemotherapy. Surgery type was categorized as breast-conserving surgery (BCS), mastectomy alone, mastectomy with immediate reconstruction (M + IR), or mastectomy with delayed reconstruction (M + DR). A Cox regression analysis was used to assess the association between surgery type and timing of chemotherapy initiation. RESULTS: Of the 3643 patients, only 5.1% received it ≥8 weeks from surgery. In the multivariate analysis, higher stage, Caucasian and Hispanic race/ethnicity, lower body mass index, and absence of comorbid conditions were all significantly associated with earlier time to chemotherapy. There was also significant interaction among age, surgery, and chemotherapy delivery. Among women <60, time to chemotherapy was shorter for all surgery types compared with M + IR (statistical significant for all surgery types in the youngest age group and for BCS in women 40 to <50 years old). In contrast, among women ≥60, time to chemotherapy was shorter among women receiving M + IR or M + DR compared with those undergoing BCS or mastectomy alone, a difference that was statistically significant for the M + IR versus BCS comparison. CONCLUSIONS: Immediate postmastectomy breast reconstruction does not appear to lead to omission of chemotherapy, but it is associated with a modest, but statistically significant, delay in initiating treatment. For most, it is unlikely that this delay has any clinical significance. Cancer 2010. © 2010 American Cancer Society.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/69182/1/24891_ftp.pd
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Last time updated on 25/05/2012