Adoption and Effectiveness of De-Escalated Radiation and Endocrine Therapy Strategies for Older Women with Low-Risk Breast Cancer

Adoption and Effectiveness of De-Escalated Radiation and Endocrine Therapy Strategies for Older Women with Low-Risk Breast Cancer

Published: Jun 01, 2021
Publisher: Journal of Geriatric Oncology, vol. 12, issue 5
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Authors

Katherine E. Reeder-Hayes

Stephanie B. Wheeler

Anne Marie Meyer

Christopher D. Baggett

Xi Zhou

Ke Meng

Timothy Zagar

Purpose

Recent clinical trials support de-escalation of adjuvant radiation therapy following lumpectomy in some older women with low-risk HR+ breast cancers planning to take endocrine therapy. The adoption of these findings into clinical practice, and the effectiveness of de-escalated therapy in real-world populations, remain under investigation.

Materials and methods

We evaluated use of adjuvant radiation therapy and/or endocrine therapy among older women with T1-2 node-negative, HR+ breast cancer in the United States between 2007 and 2011. The study included patients from the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results-Medicare linked database and the North Carolina Cancer Information and Population Health Resource database.

Results

Radiation therapy was received by 65.5% of patients, with no decrease over time. Older women and those with T2 (compared to T1) tumors were less likely to receive radiation therapy. In propensity-adjusted analyses, both radiation therapy alone (HR 0.75, 95% CI 0.67–0.84) and radiation + endocrine therapy (HR 0.62, 95% CI 0.54–0.69) were associated with significantly lower recurrence risk compared to endocrine therapy alone. Non-adherence to endocrine therapy was common (37%) and similar across groups. With a median follow-up of 48 months (range 13–84), we were not able to detect an association of non-adherence with recurrence risk in endocrine therapy-containing treatment arms.

Conclusion

Most older women with stage I HR+ breast cancers continue to receive radiation, at higher rates than patients with node-negative stage II tumors. These findings suggest that while multiple evidence-based treatment options exist in these patients, improvements are needed to ensure that radiation therapy is applied equitably and rationally.

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