| Literature DB >> 24137471 |
Tonya M Martin-Dunlap1, Mitchell S Wachtel, Julie A Margenthaler.
Abstract
The present study sought to determine the survival outcomes for women diagnosed with breast and endometrial cancer. Using SEER data, a population-based cohort study of women diagnosed with breast and endometrial cancer was conducted. Kaplan-Meier survival curves were created for disease-specific survival rates. A total of 2,027 women diagnosed with breast and endometrial cancer were identified. Of these, 1,296 (63.9%) developed breast cancer first and 731 (36.1%) developed endometrial cancer first. Regional lymph node involvement was significantly more common with a breast cancer diagnosis [522 (25.8%) women] compared with an endometrial cancer diagnosis [87 (4.3%) women] (P<0.05). Factors associated with decreased survival included a high tumor grade in endometrial cancer, nodal positivity and estrogen receptor-negative breast cancer (P<0.05 for each). There were 83 (4.1%) mortalities due to breast cancer, 63 (3.1%) mortalities due to endometrial cancer and 178 (8.8%) mortalities due to other causes (P<0.05). In conclusion, for women diagnosed with breast and endometrial cancer, the cumulative risk of mortality at five years following the second cancer diagnosis is nearly four times more likely to be due to breast cancer than endometrial cancer.Entities:
Keywords: breast cancer; endometrial cancer; survival
Year: 2013 PMID: 24137471 PMCID: PMC3796420 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2013.1491
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Summary of characteristics of interest for 2,027 women diagnosed with breast and endometrial carcinoma.
| Characteristic | Value |
|---|---|
| First tumor diagnosis, n (%) | |
| Breast cancer | 1296 (63.9) |
| Endometrial cancer/synchronous | 731 (36.1) |
| Status at end of study, n (%) | |
| Alive | 1703 (84.0) |
| Breast mortality | 83 (4.1) |
| Endometrial mortality | 63 (3.1) |
| Other mortality | 178 (8.8) |
| Endometrium histological grade, n (%) | |
| Well-differentiated (SEER grade I) | 913 (45.0) |
| Moderately-differentiated (SEER grade II) | 643 (31.7) |
| Poorly-differentiated (SEER grades III–IV) | 316 (15.6) |
| Unknown | 155 (7.6) |
| Breast histological grade, n (%) | |
| Well-differentiated (SEER grade I) | 394 (19.4) |
| Moderately-differentiated (SEER grade II) | 813 (40.1) |
| Poorly-differentiated (SEER grades III–IV) | 641 (31.6) |
| Unknown | 179 (8.8) |
| Endometrium lymph node status, n (%) | |
| Negative | 980 (48.3) |
| Positive | 87 (4.3) |
| Unknown | 960 (47.4) |
| Breast lymph node status, n (%) | |
| Negative | 1263 (62.3) |
| Positive | 522 (25.8) |
| Unknown | 242 (11.9) |
| Breast ER status, n (%) | |
| Negative | 323 (15.9) |
| Positive | 1364 (67.3) |
| Unknown | 340 (16.8) |
| Breast PR status, n (%) | |
| Negative | 466 (23.0) |
| Positive | 1178 (58.1) |
| Unknown | 383 (18.9) |
| Median age at second tumor diagnosis, years (interquartile range) | 68 (60–76) |
| Median time between first and second tumors, months (interquartile range) | 45 (17–81) |
SEER, Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results; ER, estrogen receptor; PR, progesterone receptor.
Figure 1Cause-specific cumulative risk of mortality for 2,027 women diagnosed with breast and endometrial cancer.
Figure 2Regression analysis for risk of mortality for 2,027 women diagnosed with breast and endometrial cancer as adjusted for tumor-specific factors. The first half of the study period is represented by solid bars and the second half of the study is represented by broken bars. Hazard ratios (HR; 95% CI). Adjusted: age at second tumor, time between tumors. Not shown: comparisons with unknown.