News

Frail women less likely to initiate hormonal therapy for breast cancer


 

FROM JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY

Older women with breast cancer are less likely to initiate adjuvant hormonal therapy if they are frail, according to researchers.

In a prospective cohort study of women aged 65 and older diagnosed with invasive, nonmetastatic estrogen receptor–positive breast cancers (n = 1,062), about a quarter of the women were frail or prefrail (4.9% and 18.7%, respectively) based on a validated frailty score determined at baseline, reported Vanessa Sheppard, Ph.D., of Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington (J. Clin. Oncol. 2014 June 16 [doi:10.1200/JCO.2013.51.7367]).

Overall, 14% of the women in the study did not initiate hormonal therapy. Women considered prefrail or frail were significantly less likely to initiate therapy than were those considered "robust" or nonfrail (odds ratio, 1.63; 95% CI, 1.11-2.40; P =.013). Nonwhite race was also significantly associated with noninitiation of therapy (OR, 1.71; CI, 1.04-2.80; P = 0.33).

Baseline frailty was not predictive of discontinuation of therapy after a median follow-up of 3 years, Dr. Sheppard and colleagues reported.

The findings suggest "women and/or their providers are making informed judgments about the risks and benefits," the researchers wrote. "An alternative explanation is that women with greater frailty may have been concerned about adverse effects based on interactions of hormonal therapy and specific comorbidities, such as cardio- and/or cerebrovascular disease and risk of thromboembolic events," they added.

Limitations of the study include a potential for bias associated with self-reporting (discontinuation of therapy was measured only through self-report) and measurement of frailty only at baseline, the investigators said.

The National Institutes of Health, Amgen, and the Cancer and Leukemia Group B (CALGB) Foundation funded the study. Four of Dr. Sheppard’s coauthors, Dr. Gretchen Kimmick, Dr. Eric Winer, Dr. Arti Hurria, and Dr. Claudine Isaacs reported ties with pharmaceutical manufacturers.

Recommended Reading

U.K. ahead of U.S.A. in cancer survivorship planning
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: How to improve cancer survivorship planning
MDedge Family Medicine
Obesity-hunger paradox prevalent in low-income cancer survivors
MDedge Family Medicine
Substantial delay seen in melanoma surgery for Medicare patients
MDedge Family Medicine
Depression at least five times more common than PTSD after critical illness
MDedge Family Medicine
First ASCO survivor care guidelines tackle fatigue, anxiety/depression, neuropathy
MDedge Family Medicine
Topical lidocaine reduces menopausal dyspareunia
MDedge Family Medicine
AUDIO: Challenges, rewards face creators of pediatric oncofertility clinics
MDedge Family Medicine
No link seen between ondansetron and tachyarrhythmias in healthy children
MDedge Family Medicine
Cancer survivors have higher medical costs
MDedge Family Medicine