npj Breast Cancer (Aug 2021)

Elevated risk thresholds predict endocrine risk-reducing medication use in the Athena screening registry

  • Yash S. Huilgol,
  • Holly Keane,
  • Yiwey Shieh,
  • Robert A. Hiatt,
  • Jeffrey A. Tice,
  • Lisa Madlensky,
  • Leah Sabacan,
  • Allison Stover Fiscalini,
  • Elad Ziv,
  • Irene Acerbi,
  • Mandy Che,
  • Hoda Anton-Culver,
  • Alexander D. Borowsky,
  • Sharon Hunt,
  • Arash Naeim,
  • Barbara A. Parker,
  • Laura J. van ‘T Veer,
  • Athena Breast Health Network Investigators and Advocate Partners,
  • Laura J. Esserman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41523-021-00306-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Risk-reducing endocrine therapy use, though the benefit is validated, is extremely low. The FDA has approved tamoxifen and raloxifene for a 5-year Breast Cancer Risk Assessment Tool (BCRAT) risk ≥ 1.67%. We examined the threshold at which high-risk women are likely to be using endocrine risk-reducing therapies among Athena Breast Health Network participants from 2011–2018. We identified high-risk women by a 5-year BCRAT risk ≥ 1.67% and those in the top 10% and 2.5% risk thresholds by age. We estimated the odds ratio (OR) of current medication use based on these thresholds using logistic regression. One thousand two hundred and one (1.2%) of 104,223 total participants used medication. Of the 33,082 participants with 5-year BCRAT risk ≥ 1.67%, 772 (2.3%) used medication. Of 2445 in the top 2.5% threshold, 209 (8.6%) used medication. Participants whose 5-year risk exceeded 1.67% were more likely to use medication than those whose risk was below this threshold, OR 3.94 (95% CI = 3.50–4.43). The top 2.5% was most strongly associated with medication usage, OR 9.50 (8.13–11.09) compared to the bottom 97.5%. Women exceeding a 5-year BCRAT ≥ 1.67% had modest medication use. We demonstrate that women in the top 2.5% have higher odds of medication use than those in the bottom 97.5% and compared to a risk of 1.67%. The top 2.5% threshold would more effectively target medication use and is being tested prospectively in a randomized control clinical trial.