UNICANCER: French prospective cohort study of treatment-related chronic toxicity in women with localised breast cancer (CANTO)

被引:58
|
作者
Vaz-Luis, Ines [1 ]
Cottu, Paul [2 ]
Mesleard, Christel [3 ]
Martin, Anne Laure [4 ]
Dumas, Agnes [5 ]
Dauchy, Sarah [6 ]
Tredan, Olivier [7 ]
Levy, Christelle [8 ]
Adnet, Johan [9 ]
Tsangaris, Marina Rousseau [10 ]
Andre, Fabrice [1 ]
Arveux, Patrick [9 ]
机构
[1] Gustave Roussy, UNIT 981, INSERM, Villejuif, Ile De France, France
[2] Inst Curie, Dept Med Oncol, Paris, Ile De France, France
[3] UNICANC R&D, Breast Canc Team, Paris, Ile De France, France
[4] UNICANC R&D, Dev & Partnership, Paris, Ile De France, France
[5] Gustave Roussy, UNIT1018, INSERM, Villejuif, Ile De France, France
[6] Gustave Roussy, Dept Support Care, Villejuif, Ile De France, France
[7] Ctr Leon Berard, Dept Med Oncol, Lyon, Rhone Alpes, France
[8] Ctr Francois Baclesse, Dept Med Oncol, Ctr Lutte Canc, Caen, Normandie, France
[9] Ctr Georges Francois Leclerc, Clin Res, Bourgogne Franche Comte, France
[10] Ctr Leon Berard, Translat Res, Lyon, Rhone Alpes, France
关键词
EUROPEAN-ORGANIZATION; QUALITY; RELIABILITY; INSTRUMENT; RATIONALE; OUTCOMES; FATIGUE; ANXIETY; SOCIETY; DESIGN;
D O I
10.1136/esmoopen-2019-000562
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Background Corresponding with improved survival among patients with breast cancer, the awareness of the long-term effects of cancer treatments has increased. CANcer TOxicities (CANTO) aims to identify predictors of development and persistence of long-term toxicities in patients treated for stages I-III breast cancer and to characterise their incidence, as well their impact. In this paper, we describe the methodology used in this study and provide a first characterisation of the study population. Methods CANTO (NCT01993498) is a French prospective, longitudinal cohort study enrolling patients with invasive cT0-cT3cN0-3M0 breast cancer of 26 French cancer centres. Patients are assessed at diagnosis, 3-6 (M0), 12 (M12), 36 (M36) and 60 (M60) months after completion of primary surgery, chemotherapy or radiotherapy whichever comes last. CANTO collects clinical, treatment, toxicity data, an extensive list of validated patient-reported outcomes (focusing on quality of life, psychological and behavioural questionnaires) and ad hoc socioeconomic questionnaires. Blood collection is performed at diagnosis, M0, M12, M36 and M60. Biologic sub-studies are ongoing (eg, microbiotic and cognitive sub-study). Results Enrolment started in 2012; by October 2018, 12 012 patients had been enrolled. Data collected have a low missing completion rate (<5% for key clinical variables, <20% for patient-reported outcomes). Blood, serum and plasma samples are stored in over 96% of patients. Among the first 5801 patients enrolled in CANTO, 76.7% of patients had hormone receptor positive and human epidermal growth factor 2 negative tumours; 73.1% of patients had breast conserving surgery; 90.4% received adjuvant radiotherapy, 53.4% (neo) adjuvant chemotherapy, 11.3% adjuvant trastuzumab and 80.3% adjuvant hormonotherapy. Conclusions CANTO represents a unique opportunity to explore important medical, biological and psychosocial outcomes on breast cancer survivor population.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Treatment-related symptoms among underserved women with breast cancer: the impact of physician–patient communication
    Rose C. Maly
    Yihang Liu
    Barbara Leake
    Amardeep Thind
    Allison L. Diamant
    [J]. Breast Cancer Research and Treatment, 2010, 119 : 707 - 716
  • [32] Racial disparities in treatment-related cardiovascular toxicities amongst women with breast cancer: a scoping review
    Arnethea L. Sutton
    Ashley S. Felix
    Stacey Wahl
    R. Lee Franco
    Zachary Leicht
    Karen Patricia Williams
    W. Gregory Hundley
    Vanessa B. Sheppard
    [J]. Journal of Cancer Survivorship, 2023, 17 : 1596 - 1605
  • [33] Racial disparities in treatment-related cardiovascular toxicities amongst women with breast cancer: a scoping review
    Sutton, Arnethea L.
    Felix, Ashley S.
    Wahl, Stacey
    Franco, R. Lee
    Leicht, Zachary
    Williams, Karen Patricia
    Hundley, W. Gregory
    Sheppard, Vanessa B.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CANCER SURVIVORSHIP, 2023, 17 (06) : 1596 - 1605
  • [34] Risk Prediction, Diagnosis and Management of a Breast Cancer Patient with Treatment-Related Cardiovascular Toxicity: An Essential Overview
    Cronin, Michael
    Lowery, Aoife
    Kerin, Michael
    Wijns, William
    Soliman, Osama
    [J]. CANCERS, 2024, 16 (10)
  • [35] CARDIAC REHABILITATION FOR WOMEN WITH BREAST CANCER AND TREATMENT-RELATED HEART FAILURE COMPARED WITH CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE: A RETROSPECTIVE STUDY
    Bonsignore, Alis
    Marzolini, Susan
    Oh, Paul
    [J]. JOURNAL OF REHABILITATION MEDICINE, 2017, 49 (03) : 277 - 281
  • [36] Aqua lymphatic therapy in women who suffer from breast cancer treatment-related lymphedema: a randomized controlled study
    Dorit Tidhar
    Michal Katz-Leurer
    [J]. Supportive Care in Cancer, 2010, 18 : 393 - 393
  • [37] Final results of the HERMINE cohort: a retrospective and prospective' longitudinal French cohort study of 623 metastatic breast cancer women treated by trastuzumab
    Extra, J.
    Antoine, E. C.
    Vincent-Salomon, A.
    Le Deley, M. C.
    Bergougnoux, L.
    Remblier, B.
    Vasseur, B.
    Namer, M.
    [J]. EJC SUPPLEMENTS, 2005, 3 (02): : 116 - 116
  • [38] Health-related quality of life by type of breast surgery in women with primary breast cancer: prospective longitudinal cohort study
    Gulis, Kim
    Ellbrant, Julia
    Bendahl, Par-Ola
    Svensjo, Tor
    Ryden, Lisa
    [J]. BRITISH JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 2024, 111
  • [39] Health-related quality of life by type of breast surgery in women with primary breast cancer: prospective longitudinal cohort study
    Gulis, Kim
    Ellbrant, Julia
    Bendahl, Par-Ola
    Svensjo, Tor
    Ryden, Lisa
    [J]. BJS OPEN, 2024, 8 (03):
  • [40] Breast cancer-related lymphedema and recurrence of breast cancer: Protocol for a prospective cohort study in China
    Zhuang, Linli
    Chen, Qian
    Chen, Huaying
    Zheng, Xuemei
    Liu, Xia
    Feng, Zhenzhen
    Wu, Shaoyong
    Liu, Li
    Shen, Xiaolin
    [J]. PLOS ONE, 2023, 18 (05):