Breast (Oct 2021)

Breast cancer survivorship care during the COVID-19 pandemic within an urban New York Hospital System

  • Allen Mo,
  • Julie Chung,
  • Jeremy Eichler,
  • Sarah Yukelis,
  • Sheldon Feldman,
  • Jana Fox,
  • Madhur Garg,
  • Shalom Kalnicki,
  • Nitin Ohri,
  • Joseph A. Sparano,
  • Jonathan Klein

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 59
pp. 301 – 307

Abstract

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Purpose: To examine clinicodemographic determinants associated with breast cancer survivorship follow-up during COVID-19. Methods: We performed a retrospective, population-based cohort study including early stage (Stage I-II) breast cancer patients who underwent resection between 2006 and 2018 in a New York City hospital system. The primary outcome was oncologic follow-up prior to and during the COVID-19 pandemic. Secondary analyses compared differences in follow-up by COVID-19 case rates stratified by ZIP code. Results: A total of 2942 patients with early-stage breast cancer were available for analysis. 1588 (54%) of patients had attended follow-up in the year prior to the COVID-19 period but failed to continue to follow-up during the pandemic, either in-person or via telemedicine. 1242 (42%) patients attended a follow-up appointment during the COVID-19 pandemic.Compared with patients who did not present for follow-up during COVID-19, patients who continued their oncologic follow-up during the pandemic were younger (p = 0.049) more likely to have received adjuvant radiation therapy (p = 0.025), and have lower household income (p = 0.031) on multivariate modeling. When patients who live in Bronx, New York, were stratified by ZIP code, there was a modest negative association (r = −0.56) between COVID-19 cases and proportion of patients who continued to follow-up during the COVID-19 period. Conclusion: We observed a dramatic disruption in routine breast cancer follow-up during the COVID-19 pandemic. Providers and health systems should emphasize reintegrating patients who missed appointments during COVID-19 back into regular surveillance programs to avoid significant morbidity and mortality from missed breast cancer recurrences.

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