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Time from breast cancer diagnosis to therapeutic surgery and breast cancer prognosis: A population‐based cohort study
Author(s) -
Eriksson Louise,
Bergh Jonas,
Humphreys Keith,
Wärnberg Fredrik,
Törnberg Sven,
Czene Kamila
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
international journal of cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.475
H-Index - 234
eISSN - 1097-0215
pISSN - 0020-7136
DOI - 10.1002/ijc.31411
Subject(s) - medicine , breast cancer , hazard ratio , proportional hazards model , cancer , population , confounding , oncology , lymph node , cohort study , surgery , confidence interval , environmental health
Theoretically, time from breast cancer diagnosis to therapeutic surgery should affect survival. However, it is unclear whether this holds true in a modern healthcare setting in which breast cancer surgery is carried out within weeks to months of diagnosis. This is a population‐ and register‐based study of all women diagnosed with invasive breast cancer in the Stockholm‐Gotland healthcare region in Sweden, 2001–2008, and who were initially operated. Follow‐up of vital status ended 2014. 7,017 women were included in analysis. Our main outcome was overall survival. Main analyses were carried out using Cox proportional hazards models. We adjusted for likely confounders and stratified on mode of detection, tumor size and lymph node metastasis. We found that a longer interval between date of morphological diagnosis and therapeutic surgery was associated with a poorer prognosis. Assuming a linear association, the hazard rate of death from all causes increased by 1.011 (95% CI 1.006–1.017) per day. Comparing, for example, surgery 6 weeks after diagnosis to surgery 3 weeks after diagnosis, thereby confers a 1.26‐fold increased hazard rate. The increase in hazard rate associated with surgical delay was strongest in women with largest tumors. Whilst there was a clear association between delays and survival in women without lymph node metastasis, the association may be attenuated in subgroups with increasing number of lymph node metastases. We found no evidence of an interaction between time to surgery and mode of detection. In conclusion, unwarranted delays to primary treatment of breast cancer should be avoided.