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Impact of Older Age and Comorbidity on Locoregional and Distant Breast Cancer Recurrence: A Large Population-Based Study.

Anna Z de BoerHeleen C van der HulstNienke A de GlasPerla J Marang-van de MheenSabine SieslingLinda de MunckKelly M de LigtJohanneke E A PortieljeEsther BastiaannetGerrit Jan Liefers
Published in: The oncologist (2019)
In this population-based study of 18,419 surgically treated patients aged 70 years or older, patients aged 75-79 years were at higher risk of distant recurrence than were patients aged 70-74 years. This finding suggests that patients in this age category are undertreated. In contrast, it was also demonstrated that the risk of dying without a recurrence strongly increases with age, and patients with a high competing mortality risk are easily overtreated. To identify older patients who may benefit from more treatment, clinicians should therefore take competing mortality risk into account. Prediction tools could facilitate this and thereby improve treatment strategy.
Keyphrases
  • end stage renal disease
  • newly diagnosed
  • ejection fraction
  • prognostic factors
  • magnetic resonance
  • palliative care
  • lymph node
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • young adults
  • free survival
  • childhood cancer