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Breast cancer management pathways during the COVID-19 pandemic: outcomes from the UK 'Alert Level 4' phase of the B-MaP-C study.

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posted on 2021-04-30, 09:17 authored by Rajiv V Dave, Baek Kim, Alona Courtney, Rachel O'Connell, Tim Rattay, Vicky P Taxiarchi, Jamie J Kirkham, Elizabeth M Camacho, Patricia Fairbrother, Nisha Sharma, Christopher WJ Cartlidge, Kieran Horgan, Stuart A McIntosh, Daniel R Leff, Raghavan Vidya, Shelley Potter, Chris Holcombe, Ellen Copson, Charlotte E Coles, Ramsey I Cutress, Ashu Gandhi, Cliona C Kirwan, B-MaP-C study collaborative
BACKGROUND: The B-MaP-C study aimed to determine alterations to breast cancer (BC) management during the peak transmission period of the UK COVID-19 pandemic and the potential impact of these treatment decisions. METHODS: This was a national cohort study of patients with early BC undergoing multidisciplinary team (MDT)-guided treatment recommendations during the pandemic, designated 'standard' or 'COVID-altered', in the preoperative, operative and post-operative setting. FINDINGS: Of 3776 patients (from 64 UK units) in the study, 2246 (59%) had 'COVID-altered' management. 'Bridging' endocrine therapy was used (n = 951) where theatre capacity was reduced. There was increasing access to COVID-19 low-risk theatres during the study period (59%). In line with national guidance, immediate breast reconstruction was avoided (n = 299). Where adjuvant chemotherapy was omitted (n = 81), the median benefit was only 3% (IQR 2-9%) using 'NHS Predict'. There was the rapid adoption of new evidence-based hypofractionated radiotherapy (n = 781, from 46 units). Only 14 patients (1%) tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 during their treatment journey. CONCLUSIONS: The majority of 'COVID-altered' management decisions were largely in line with pre-COVID evidence-based guidelines, implying that breast cancer survival outcomes are unlikely to be negatively impacted by the pandemic. However, in this study, the potential impact of delays to BC presentation or diagnosis remains unknown.

History

Citation

Br J Cancer (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41416-020-01234-4

Author affiliation

Leicester Cancer Research Centre, University of Leicester

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Br J Cancer

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

issn

0007-0920

eissn

1532-1827

Acceptance date

2020-12-10

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2021-04-30

Spatial coverage

England

Language

eng

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