TY - JOUR
T1 - Pattern of relapse in low-risk breast cancer patients followed within a community care network
AU - Agopian, Anahid
AU - Dubot, Coraline
AU - Houzard, Sophie
AU - Savignoni, Alexia
AU - Fridmann, Sylvie
AU - Odier, Anne
AU - Fourquet, Alain
AU - Fourchotte, Virginie
AU - Dehghani, Christine
AU - Nos, Claude
AU - Delaloge, Suzette
AU - Zongo, Nayi
AU - Cottu, Paul
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
PY - 2017/11/1
Y1 - 2017/11/1
N2 - International guidelines have set the frame and methods of patients’ surveillance after early breast cancer (BC) treatment. Since 1998, delegation of low-risk BC patients follow-up to nonhospital practitioners has been developed within a care network in the Paris region. We used the Gynecomed care network digital database to describe the characteristics of oncological events which occurred in the cohort, and to assess the quality of BC follow-up in relapsing patients. Events were defined as any local, contralateral, or metastatic recurrence, as well as second cancer or death due to any cause. We developed a ranked evaluation method of our surveillance program. Among the 3019 patients followed in the network, 116 (4.3%) patients had 116 events. Median follow-up was 7.1 years (0-51). First events were local-regional relapses, contralateral BCs, metastatic events, second primaries in respectively 52, 26, 14, 24 cases. During the first 5 years, 68.4% of surveillance visits were performed on time, 13.5% were behind schedule and 18.1% were not performed, while 79.1% of mammographies were performed on time, 7.7% behind schedule, and 13.2% were not performed. On schedule examinations allowed diagnosis of 77% of the local-regional, ipsilateral relapses or contralateral BCs, including 38 (69%) discovered by mammographies and 17 (31%) by clinical examination. A nonhospital practitioner care network is able to comply with good surveillance practices and deliver high quality surveillance, in accordance with international guidelines. Delegation of low-risk BC surveillance to nonhospital practitioners is reliable.
AB - International guidelines have set the frame and methods of patients’ surveillance after early breast cancer (BC) treatment. Since 1998, delegation of low-risk BC patients follow-up to nonhospital practitioners has been developed within a care network in the Paris region. We used the Gynecomed care network digital database to describe the characteristics of oncological events which occurred in the cohort, and to assess the quality of BC follow-up in relapsing patients. Events were defined as any local, contralateral, or metastatic recurrence, as well as second cancer or death due to any cause. We developed a ranked evaluation method of our surveillance program. Among the 3019 patients followed in the network, 116 (4.3%) patients had 116 events. Median follow-up was 7.1 years (0-51). First events were local-regional relapses, contralateral BCs, metastatic events, second primaries in respectively 52, 26, 14, 24 cases. During the first 5 years, 68.4% of surveillance visits were performed on time, 13.5% were behind schedule and 18.1% were not performed, while 79.1% of mammographies were performed on time, 7.7% behind schedule, and 13.2% were not performed. On schedule examinations allowed diagnosis of 77% of the local-regional, ipsilateral relapses or contralateral BCs, including 38 (69%) discovered by mammographies and 17 (31%) by clinical examination. A nonhospital practitioner care network is able to comply with good surveillance practices and deliver high quality surveillance, in accordance with international guidelines. Delegation of low-risk BC surveillance to nonhospital practitioners is reliable.
KW - breast cancer
KW - primary care physicians
KW - recurrence
KW - surveillance
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85019949292&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/tbj.12821
DO - 10.1111/tbj.12821
M3 - Article
C2 - 28556478
AN - SCOPUS:85019949292
SN - 1075-122X
VL - 23
SP - 687
EP - 693
JO - Breast Journal
JF - Breast Journal
IS - 6
ER -