Incidence of reduced chemotherapy relative dose intensity among women with early stage breast cancer in US clinical practice

被引:0
|
作者
Derek Weycker
Rich Barron
John Edelsberg
Alex Kartashov
Gary H. Lyman
机构
[1] Policy Analysis Inc. (PAI),
[2] Amgen Inc.,undefined
[3] Duke University School of Medicine,undefined
[4] Center for Clinical Health Policy Research,undefined
来源
关键词
Breast cancer; Chemotherapy; Outcomes research;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Chemotherapy is widely used to treat early stage breast cancer (ESBC). Reductions and delays in dose administered—e.g., due to advanced age or febrile neutropenia (FN)—are generally believed to increase risk of disease progression and reduce survival. Little is known about incidence of reduced chemotherapy dose intensity among women with ESBC in the current era of US clinical practice. This study employed a retrospective cohort design and electronic medical records from >65 community oncology/hematology clinics in >35 states (2004–2010). The study population comprised adult women who received myelosuppressive chemotherapy for ESBC (stages I–IIIA). For each such woman, each unique cycle of chemotherapy within their first observed course was identified. Incidence of chemotherapy dose delays (≥7 days for any drug in ≥1 cycles), chemotherapy dose reductions (≥15% for any drug in ≥1 cycles), and low chemotherapy relative dose intensity (RDI <85% over the course) relative to published reference standards were descriptively analyzed for the seven most-frequently planned regimens in the study database. A total of 2,228 women (70% of the subjects who received chemotherapy for ESBC and met other selection criteria) initiated 1 of the 7 most-frequently planned regimens. Mean age of subjects was 54 years and 69% received primary prophylaxis against FN with a colony-stimulating factor. Incidence of dose delays, dose reductions, and low RDI was 31, 24, and 26%, respectively; low RDI typically was due to premature treatment discontinuation. For patients (n = 626) receiving the most common regimen (dose-dense AC-T: doxorubicin/cyclophosphamide, Q2 × 4 cycles, paclitaxel or docetaxel, Q2 × 4 cycles), incidence of dose delays, dose reductions, and low RDI was 42, 29, and 32%, respectively. In the current era of US clinical practice, chemotherapy dose delays and dose reductions are common among women with ESBC receiving frequently used myelosuppressive dose-dense, as well as conventional, chemotherapy regimens.
引用
收藏
页码:301 / 310
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Incidence of reduced chemotherapy relative dose intensity among women with early stage breast cancer in US clinical practice
    Weycker, Derek
    Barron, Rich
    Edelsberg, John
    Kartashov, Alex
    Lyman, Gary H.
    [J]. BREAST CANCER RESEARCH AND TREATMENT, 2012, 133 (01) : 301 - 310
  • [2] Incidence of Chemotherapy Dose Reductions and Dose Delays, and Reduced Chemotherapy Dose Intensity in Early Stage Breast Cancer.
    Weycker, D.
    Edelsberg, J.
    Kartashov, A.
    Barron, R.
    Lyman, G.
    [J]. CANCER RESEARCH, 2011, 71
  • [3] Predictors of reduced relative dose intensity (RDI) in patients with early-stage breast cancer (ESBC) receiving adjuvant chemotherapy (CT).
    Lyman, GH
    Crawford, J
    Dale, DC
    [J]. BREAST CANCER RESEARCH AND TREATMENT, 2004, 88 : S49 - S49
  • [4] Predictors of reduced dose intensity in patients with early-stage breast cancer receiving adjuvant chemotherapy
    Michelle Shayne
    Jeffrey Crawford
    David C. Dale
    Eva Culakova
    Gary H. Lyman
    [J]. Breast Cancer Research and Treatment, 2006, 100 : 255 - 262
  • [5] Predictors of reduced dose intensity in patients with early-stage breast cancer receiving adjuvant chemotherapy
    Shayne, Michelle
    Crawford, Jeffrey
    Dale, David C.
    Culakova, Eva
    Lyman, Gary H.
    [J]. BREAST CANCER RESEARCH AND TREATMENT, 2006, 100 (03) : 255 - 262
  • [6] A prospective assessment of variables contributing to reduced relative dose intensity in patients with early-stage breast cancer receiving adjuvant chemotherapy.
    Shayne, M
    Culakova, E
    Wolff, D
    Poniewierski, M
    Lyman, GH
    Dale, DC
    Crawford, J
    [J]. BREAST CANCER RESEARCH AND TREATMENT, 2005, 94 : S110 - S110
  • [7] Racial disparity in dose intensity of early-stage breast cancer chemotherapy
    Rosenzweig, Margaret Q.
    Mazanec, Susan R.
    Brufsky, Adam
    Gordon, Brittaney-Belle Elizabeth
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2023, 41 (16)
  • [8] Relative dose intensity as a proxy measure of quality and prognosis in adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer in daily clinical practice
    Schraa, S. J.
    Frerichs, K. A.
    Agterof, M. J.
    Hunting, J. C. B.
    Los, M.
    de Jong, P. C.
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CANCER, 2017, 79 : 152 - 157
  • [9] Relative dose intensity in early stage breast cancer chemotherapy: A retrospective analysis of incidence, risk factors and outcomes at a south-west Sydney cancer clinic
    Sandy, Jessica
    Della-Fiorentina, Stephen
    [J]. ASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2013, 9 (04) : 365 - 372
  • [10] Dose Intensity in Early-Stage Breast Cancer: A Community Practice Experience
    Bretzel, Robert L., Jr.
    Cameron, Ralph
    Gustas, Marc
    Garcia, Maria A.
    Hoffman, Heather K.
    Malhotra, Rosalind
    Miller, Karen
    Prime, Janine
    Favret, Anne
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ONCOLOGY PRACTICE, 2009, 5 (06) : 287 - 290