Bridging The Age Gap: observational cohort study of effects of chemotherapy and trastuzumab on recurrence, survival and quality of life in older women with early breast cancer
posted on 2025-03-07, 15:50authored byAlistair Ring, Nicolo Matteo Luca Battisti, Malcolm WR Reed, Esther Herbert, Jenna L Morgan, Michael Bradburn, Stephen J Walters, Karen A Collins, Sue E Ward, Geoffrey R Holmes, Maria Burton, Kate Lifford, Adrian Edwards, Thompson G Robinson, Charlene Martin, Tim Chater, Kirsty J Pemberton, Alan Brennan, Kwok Leung Cheung, Annaliza Todd, Riccardo A Audisio, Juliet Wright, Richard Simcock, Tracey Green, Deirdre Revell, Jacqui Gath, Kieran Horgan, Chris Holcombe, Matthew C Winter, Jay Naik, Rishi Parmeshwar, Margot A Gosney, Matthew Q Hatton, Alastair M Thompson, Lynda Wyld
Background: Chemotherapy improves outcomes for high risk early breast cancer (EBC) patients but is infrequently offered to older individuals. This study determined if there are fit older patients with high-risk disease who may benefit from chemotherapy. Methods: A multicentre, prospective, observational study was performed to determine chemotherapy (±trastuzumab) usage and survival and quality-of-life outcomes in EBC patients aged ≥70 years. Propensity score-matching adjusted for variation in baseline age, fitness and tumour stage. Results: Three thousands four hundred sixteen women were recruited from 56 UK centres between 2013 and 2018. Two thousands eight hundred eleven (82%) had surgery. 1520/2811 (54%) had high-risk EBC and 2059/2811 (73%) were fit. Chemotherapy was given to 306/1100 (27.8%) fit patients with high-risk EBC. Unmatched comparison of chemotherapy versus no chemotherapy demonstrated reduced metastatic recurrence risk in high-risk patients(hazard ratio [HR] 0.36 [95% CI 0.19–0.68]) and in 541 age, stage and fitness-matched patients(adjusted HR 0.43 [95% CI 0.20–0.92]) but no benefit to overall survival (OS) or breast cancer-specific survival (BCSS) in either group. Chemotherapy improved survival in women with oestrogen receptor (ER)-negative cancer (OS: HR 0.20 [95% CI 0.08–0.49];BCSS: HR 0.12 [95% CI 0.03–0.44]).Transient negative quality-of-life impacts were observed. Conclusions: Chemotherapy was associated with reduced risk of metastatic recurrence, but survival benefits were only seen in patients with ER-negative cancer. Quality-of-life impacts were significant but transient. Trial Registration: ISRCTN 46099296.