Abstract
Objective
To identify factors associated with delays in beginning adjuvant therapy and prognosis impacts on non-metastatic breast cancer patients.
Methods
This assessment comprised a prospective cohort study concerning breast cancer patients treated at a public oncology centre. A time interval of ≥60 days between surgery and the beginning of the first adjuvant treatment was categorised as a delay. Factors associated with delays were evaluated through logistic regression analysis and the prognosis effects were assessed by a Cox regression analysis.
Results
The median time interval between surgery and the first adjuvant treatment for the 401 women included in this study was of 57.0 days (37.0–93.0). Independent factors associated with delays comprised not presenting an overexpression of the HER-2 protein, not having undergone neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and having undergone chemotherapy or other therapeutic modalities other than hormone therapy and chemotherapy as the first adjuvant treatment. Delays did not affect recurrence, distant metastasis, or death risks. Factors associated with recurrence and distant metastasis risks comprised a clinical staging ≥2B, having undergone neoadjuvant chemotherapy, presenting the luminal molecular subtype B and triple-negative tumours, and having children. Factors associated with death comprised triple-negative molecular tumours and neoadjuvant chemotherapy.
Conclusion
Delays in beginning adjuvant treatment did not affect the prognosis of non-metastatic breast cancer patients. Clinical and treatment-related factors, on the other hand, were associated with delays, and recurrence, distant metastasis, and death risks.