Frontiers in Oncology (Jan 2023)
Impact of clinicopathological factors on extended endocrine therapy decision making in estrogen receptor–positive breast cancer
Abstract
PurposeIn our study, we aim to analyze the impact of clinicopathological factors on the recommendation of extended endocrine therapy (EET) in patients with ER+ breast cancer and to retrospectively validate the value of CTS5 in EET decision making.Patients and methodsThe retrospective analysis was performed in patients with ER+ breast cancer who have finished 4.5–5 years of adjuvant endocrine therapy and undergone MDT discussion from October 2017 to November 2019. Multivariate logistic regression was used to identify the independent factors for treatment recommendation. CTS5 was calculated for retrospective validation of the EET decision making.ResultsTwo hundred thirty-five patients were received; 4.5–5 years of adjuvant endocrine therapy were included in the study. Multivariate analysis suggested that age (OR 0.460, 95% CI 0.219–0.965, p = 0.04), pN (OR 39.350, 95% CI 9.831–157.341, P < 0.001), and receipt of chemotherapy (OR 3.478, 95% CI 1.336–9.055, p = 0.011) were independent predictors for the recommendation of EET. In the previously selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM)–treated subgroup, pN and receipt of chemotherapy were independent predictors for the recommendation of EET. In the previously AI-treated subgroup, age, pN, and receipt of chemotherapy were independent predictors. Adverse events did not affect the recommendation in patients previously treated with adjuvant endocrine treatment nor in the previously SERM or AI-treated subgroups. CTS5 (OR 21.887, 95% CI 2.846–168.309, p = 0.003) remained an independent predictor for the recommendation of EET.ConclusionsOur study indicated that age, lymph nodal status, and receipt of chemotherapy were independent predictors for the recommendation of EET. The application of the CTS5 on EET decision making might be valuable among ER+ breast cancer patients.
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