Cancers (Apr 2024)

Implementation and Evaluation of a Breast Cancer Disease Model Using Real-World Claims Data in Germany from 2010 to 2020

  • Dominik Dannehl,
  • Alexandra von Au,
  • Tobias Engler,
  • Léa Louise Volmer,
  • Raphael Gutsfeld,
  • Johannes Felix Englisch,
  • Markus Hahn,
  • Sabine Hawighorst-Knapstein,
  • Ariane Chaudhuri,
  • Armin Bauer,
  • Markus Wallwiener,
  • Florin-Andrei Taran,
  • Diethelm Wallwiener,
  • Sara Yvonne Brucker,
  • Stephanie Wallwiener,
  • Andreas Daniel Hartkopf,
  • Tjeerd Maarten Hein Dijkstra

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16081490
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 8
p. 1490

Abstract

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Breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related mortality among women in Germany and worldwide. This retrospective claims data analysis utilizing data from AOK Baden-Wuerttemberg, a major statutory German health insurance provider, aimed to construct and assess a real-world data breast cancer disease model. The study included 27,869 female breast cancer patients and 55,738 age-matched controls, analyzing data from 2010 to 2020. Three distinct breast cancer stages were analyzed: Stage A (early breast cancer without lymph node involvement), Stage B (early breast cancer with lymph node involvement), and Stage C (primary distant metastatic breast cancer). Tumor subtypes were estimated based on the prescription of antihormonal or HER2-targeted therapy. The study established that 77.9% of patients had HR+ breast cancer and 9.8% HER2+; HR+/HER2− was the most common subtype (70.9%). Overall survival (OS) analysis demonstrated significantly lower survival rates for stages B and C than for controls, with 5-year OS rates ranging from 79.3% for stage B to 35.4% for stage C. OS rates were further stratified by tumor subtype and stage, revealing varying prognoses. Distant recurrence-free survival (DRFS) analysis showed higher recurrence rates in stage B than in stage A, with HR−/HER2− displaying the worst DRFS. This study, the first to model breast cancer subtypes, stages, and outcomes using German claims data, provides valuable insights into real-world breast cancer epidemiology and demonstrates that this breast cancer disease model has the potential to be representative of treatment outcomes.

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