A multi-institutional real world data study from India of 3453 non-metastatic breast cancer patients undergoing upfront surgery.
Dinesh Chandra DovalSelvi RadhakrishnaRupal TripathiRenu Iyer KashinathVineet TalwarUllas BatraNaga Amulya MullapudiKapil KumarAjay Kumar DewanHarit ChaturvediJuhi TayalAnurag MehtaSudeep GuptaRamesh B V NimmagaddaPublished in: Scientific reports (2020)
The present analysis reports the clinical, pathological, treatment profile and overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS) outcomes of consecutive breast cancer patients from three Indian centres, who underwent curative surgery as their first treatment. Among the 3453 patients, stage I, II, and III cases were 11.75%, 66.79%, and 21.64%, respectively while hormone receptor positive/HER2 negative, triple negative (TNBC) and hormone receptor any/HER2 positive cases were 55.2%, 24.2% and 20.6%, respectively. The five-year OS in the entire cohort, node-negative and node-positive patients were 94.1% (93.25-94.98), 96.17% (95.2-97.15) and 91.83% (90.36-93.31), respectively, and the corresponding DFS were 88.1% (86.96-89.31), 92.0% (90.64-93.39) and 83.93% (82.03-85.89), respectively. The five-year OS in hormone receptor positive/HER2 negative, TNBC and HER2 subgroups were 96.11% (95.12-97.1), 92.74% (90.73-94.8) and 90.62% (88.17-93.15), respectively, and the corresponding DFS were 91.59% (90.19-93.02), 85.46% (82.79-88.22) and 81.29% (78.11-84.61), respectively. This is the largest dataset of early breast cancer patients from India with survival outcome analysis and can therefore serve as a benchmark for future studies.
Keyphrases
- free survival
- end stage renal disease
- chronic kidney disease
- prognostic factors
- patients undergoing
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- minimally invasive
- metastatic breast cancer
- lymph node
- coronary artery bypass
- type diabetes
- patient reported outcomes
- coronary artery disease
- electronic health record
- acute coronary syndrome
- adipose tissue
- deep learning
- big data
- rectal cancer