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. 2022 May 16;12(1):8097.
doi: 10.1038/s41598-022-12228-y.

Using population-based data to evaluate the impact of adherence to endocrine therapy on survival in breast cancer through the web-application BreCanSurvPred

Affiliations

Using population-based data to evaluate the impact of adherence to endocrine therapy on survival in breast cancer through the web-application BreCanSurvPred

Rebeca Font et al. Sci Rep. .

Abstract

We show how the use and interpretation of population-based cancer survival indicators can help oncologists talk with breast cancer (BC) patients about the relationship between their prognosis and their adherence to endocrine therapy (ET). The study population comprised a population-based cohort of estrogen receptor positive BC patients (N = 1268) diagnosed in Girona and Tarragona (Northeastern Spain) and classified according to HER2 status (+ / -), stage at diagnosis (I/II/III) and five-year cumulative adherence rate (adherent > 80%; non-adherent ≤ 80%). Cox regression analysis was performed to identify significant prognostic factors for overall survival, whereas relative survival (RS) was used to estimate the crude probability of death due to BC (PBC). Stage and adherence to ET were the significant factors for predicting all-cause mortality. Compared to stage I, risk of death increased in stage II (hazard ratio [HR] 2.24, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.51-3.30) and stage III (HR 5.11, 95% CI 3.46-7.51), and it decreased with adherence to ET (HR 0.57, 95% CI 0.41-0.59). PBC differences were higher in non-adherent patients compared to adherent ones and increased across stages: stage I: 6.61% (95% CI 0.05-13.20); stage II: 9.77% (95% CI 0.59-19.01), and stage III: 22.31% (95% CI 6.34-38.45). The age-adjusted survival curves derived from this modeling were implemented in the web application BreCanSurvPred ( https://pdocomputation.snpstats.net/BreCanSurvPred ). Web applications like BreCanSurvPred can help oncologists discuss the consequences of non-adherence to prescribed ET with patients.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no competing interests.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Patients diagnosed with hormone receptor-positive breast cancer before the age of 85 years in Girona and Tarragona: age-adjusted survival curves according to (a) age groups, (b) HER2 status, (c) stage at diagnosis, and (d) adherence to endocrine treatment.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Plot of the time-dependent effect of “adherence” with 95% confidence intervals: in blue, log-hazard ratio coefficient, βadherence, estimated from the model with splines (model C.3) considering adherence as constant effect; in red, “time-varying” effect of “adherence” estimated through LOWESS regression of the scaled Schoenfeld residuals from model C.3 versus time (follow-up).
Figure 3
Figure 3
Predicted cumulative probabilities of death due to cancer at 5 (panels ac) and 10 years (panels df) after diagnosis according to age and adherence to treatment (results presented by stage of BC at diagnosis).
Figure 4
Figure 4
Snapshot of the web-based survival prediction application BreCanSurvPred. This snapshot demonstrates the probabilities of survival and death as well as the 5-year conditional probabilities of observed survival and relative survival for a 60-year old patient who was not adherent to endocrine therapy and who was diagnosed with stage III molecular subtype HER2 − /HR + breast cancer. These probabilites are calculated up to 10 years after BC diagnosis.
Figure 5
Figure 5
Snapshot of the web-based survival prediction application BreCanSurvPred. This snapshot shows the comparison of survival according to adherence to endocrine treatment for a 60-year old patient diagnosed with molecular subtype HER2 − /HR + in stage III. These survival probabilites are calculated up to 10 years after BC diagnosis. (Time: time since diagnosis [follow-up]; Percentage: percent survival at a certain Time ).

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