| Literature DB >> 21072304 |
Libby Morimoto1, Jenna Coalson, Fionna Mowat, Cynthia O'Malley.
Abstract
AIMS: To review literature describing factors associated with receipt of chemotherapy for breast cancer, to better understand what factors are most relevant to women's health and whether health disparities are apparent, and to assess how these factors might affect observational studies and outcomes research. Patterns of care for metastatic breast cancer, for which no standard-of-care exists, were of particular interest.Entities:
Keywords: breast cancer; chemotherapy; health disparities; metastatic; treatment decisions
Year: 2010 PMID: 21072304 PMCID: PMC2971726 DOI: 10.2147/ijwh.s9125
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Womens Health ISSN: 1179-1411
Studies related to the role of patient characteristics in treatment decision making for breast cancer
| Caban et al | n = 234 | Patient age was a significant predictor of neoadjuvant therapy | — | Data not shown |
| Diab et al | n = 50,828 (San Antonio breast cancer databases) | 55–64 years: 30 | — | Study included stages I–IV |
| Du and Goodwin | n = 10,604 | 65–69 years: 39 | — | Information is specific to stage IV disease |
| — | Odds of receiving chemotherapy relative to 65–69 year olds: | Information includes stages I–IV | ||
| Du and Goodwin | n = 35,060 (no age-specific n’s given) | 65–69 years: 21 | Odds of receiving chemotherapy relative to 65–69 year olds: | Study included stages I–IV |
| Freyer et al | n = 1,009 | 65–74 years: 50 | — | Study included only stage IV cases |
| Percentages receiving the standard dose and cycle length: | — | Study included only stage IV cases | ||
| Golledge et al | n = 784 | Lymph node positive cases: | — | — |
| Lymph node negative cases: | — | |||
| Grunfeld et al | n = 30 oncologists | — | — | Surveyed for stage IV treatment only |
| Mitchell et al | n = 682 | Older age was a significant predictor of belief in religious intervention in place of treatment (r2 = 0.11) | — | Study interviewed cancer-free women about hypothetical breast cancer experiences |
| Peele et al | n = 386 | Younger patients were more likely to choose adjuvant therapy | — | Study included stages I–IV |
| Wyld et al | n = 378 | 55–69 years: 32.0 | — | Study included stages I–IV |
| Ashing-Giwa et al | n = 102 | African Americans were the least likely to have received adjuvant therapies, including chemotherapy | — | Data not shown |
| Du and Goodwin | n = 10,604 | White: 26.5 | — | Information is specific to stage IV disease |
| — | Odds of receiving chemotherapy relative to white patients: | Information includes stages I–IV | ||
| Maloney et al | n = 52 | Caucasian: 81.3 | — | Study included stages I–IV |
| Mitchell et al | n = 682 | Being African American was a significant predictor of belief in religious intervention in place of treatment (r2 = 0.41) | — | Study interviewed cancer-free women about hypothetical breast cancer experiences |
| Shavers et al | n = 3,978 | African American: 46.5 | — | Study included stages I–IV |
| Ashing-Giwa et al | n = 102 | — | — | Interviews with cases in stages I–IV |
| Downing et al | n = 12,768 | Quartile I (affluent): 29.2 | — | Study included stages I–IV |
| Liu et al | WHN: n = 331 (lower income) | Lower income: 35.4 | — | Study included stages I–IV |
| Ashing-Giwa et al | n = 102 | — | — | Interviews with cases in stages I–IV |
| Grunfeld et al | n = 30 oncologists | — | — | Surveyed for stage IV treatment only |
| Mitchell et al | n = 682 | Having less education was a significant predictor of belief in religious intervention in place of treatment (r2 =−0.19) | — | Study interviewed cancer-free women about hypothetical breast cancer experience |
| Peele et al | n = 386 | Women with more years of education were more likely to receive chemotherapy | — | Study included stages I–IV |
| Ashing-Giwa et al | n = 102 | — | — | Interviews with cases in stages I–IV Authors reported that language barriers prevented half of the Latinas and some of the monolingual Asian-Americans in their study from following and meeting the requirements for treatment-related financial assistance |
| Grunfeld et al | n = 30 oncologists | — | — | Surveyed for stage IV treatment only |
Abbreviations: OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; NR, not reported; BCS, breast-conserving surgery; SES, socioeconomic status; WHN, Women’s Health Network; HS, high school; MA, Massachusetts.
Studies related to the role of hospital/physician/insurance characteristics in treatment decision making for breast cancer
| Liu et al | WHN: n = 331 (lower income) | Uninsured: 35.4 | Study included stages I–IV |
| Jacobson et al | n = 2,246 | By Medicare reimbursement index: | Study included only stage IV |
| Freyer et al | n = 1,009 | — | Study included stage IV only Treatment chosen by a single physician 65–74 years: 30% ≥75 years: 43% |
| Peele et al | n = 386 | Patients treated at university-based clinics were more likely to choose chemotherapy treatment | Study included stages I–IV |
Abbreviations: OR, odds ratio; NR, not reported; WHN, Women’s Health Network; SES, socioeconomic status; MA, Massachusetts.
Studies related to the role of clinical characteristics in treatment decision making for breast cancer
| Du and Goodwin | n = 10,604 | Node positive, ER negative: | — | Study included stages I–IV |
| — | Odds of receiving chemotherapy relative to a tumor size <1.0 cm: | Study included stages I–IV | ||
| Du and Goodwin | n = 35,060 | — | Lymph node positive and ER negative relative to lymph node positive and ER positive: | Study included stages I–IV |
| Golledge et al | n = 784 | Lymph node positive: 25 | — | Study included stages I–IV |
| Grunfeld et al | n = 30 oncologists | — | — | Surveyed for stage IV treatment only |
| Peele et al | n = 386 | Patients with more severe disease were more likely to choose chemotherapy treatment | — | Study included stages I–IV |
| Low severity with a decision aid: 58.3 | — | Study included stages I–IV | ||
| Caban et al | n = 234 | Patients with disability: 13% | — | Study includes stages I–IV |
| Du and Goodwin | n = 10,604 | — | Odds of receiving chemotherapy relative to a comorbidity index of 0: | Study includes stages I–IV |
| Freyer et al | n = 1,009 | — | — | Study includes stage IV only Physicians indicated that subjective determination of general health status was the most important criterion for treatment with weaker doses of chemotherapy |
| Grunfeld et al | n = 30 oncologists | — | — | Surveyed for stage IV treatment only Percent of clinicians rating factor as quite or very important in decision to treat with palliative chemotherapy: Performance status: 96.6% Concurrent medical conditions: 82.8% Frailty: 93.1% |
| Du and Goodwin | n = 10,604 | No surgery: 27.2 | — | Information is specific to stage IV |
| — | Odds of receiving chemotherapy relative to no surgery as previous treatment: | Information includes stages I–IV | ||
| Grunfeld et al | n = 30 oncologists | — | — | Surveyed stage IV treatment only. Percent of clinicians rating factor as quite or very important in decision to treat with palliative chemotherapy: |
Abbreviations: OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; NR, not reported; BCS, breast-conserving surgery; ER, estrogen-receptor; PR, progesterone-receptor; RT, radiotherapy
Studies related to the role of psychosocial characteristics in treatment decision making for breast cancer
| Du and Goodwin | n = 10,604 | Married: 37.4 | — | Information is specific to stage IV disease |
| — | Odds of receiving chemotherapy relative to married patients: | Information includes stages I–IV | ||
| Grunfeld et al | n = 30 oncologists | — | — | Surveyed for stage IV treatment only. |
| Osborne et al | n = 32,268 | Married: 12.3 | — | Study included stages I–IV |
| Goodwin et al | n = 24,696 | Depressed: 18.6 | — | Study included only stage IV cases |
| Grunfeld et al | n = 30 oncologists | — | — | Surveyed for stage IV treatment only. Percent of clinicians rating factor as quite or very important in decision to treat with palliative chemotherapy: Anxiety: 44.8% |
| Butow et al | n = 99 (minimizers defined as those who scored above median, nonminimizers were those who scored at or below median) | Patient attempted to minimize impact on social, work, and family life, percent that received chemotherapy: | — | Study included only stage IV |
| Grunfeld et al | n = 30 oncologists | — | — | Surveyed for stage IV treatment only Percent of clinicians rating factor as quite or very important in decision to treat with palliative chemotherapy: |
Abbreviations: OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; NR, not reported.