Success and Failure of Primary Medical, Nonoperative Management In Breast Cancer.

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Success and Failure of Primary Medical, Nonoperative Management In Breast Cancer. / Schmid, Seraina Margaretha; Modlasiak, Aleksandra Anna; Myrick, Mary Elizabeth; Kilic, Nerbil; Viehl, Carsten Thomas; Schötzau, Andreas; Güth, Uwe.

in: ANN SURG ONCOL, Jahrgang 18, Nr. 8, 8, 2011, S. 2166-2172.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Schmid, SM, Modlasiak, AA, Myrick, ME, Kilic, N, Viehl, CT, Schötzau, A & Güth, U 2011, 'Success and Failure of Primary Medical, Nonoperative Management In Breast Cancer.', ANN SURG ONCOL, Jg. 18, Nr. 8, 8, S. 2166-2172. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21311982?dopt=Citation>

APA

Schmid, S. M., Modlasiak, A. A., Myrick, M. E., Kilic, N., Viehl, C. T., Schötzau, A., & Güth, U. (2011). Success and Failure of Primary Medical, Nonoperative Management In Breast Cancer. ANN SURG ONCOL, 18(8), 2166-2172. [8]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21311982?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Schmid SM, Modlasiak AA, Myrick ME, Kilic N, Viehl CT, Schötzau A et al. Success and Failure of Primary Medical, Nonoperative Management In Breast Cancer. ANN SURG ONCOL. 2011;18(8):2166-2172. 8.

Bibtex

@article{0caca1d10e644618b7e30457a7d6807f,
title = "Success and Failure of Primary Medical, Nonoperative Management In Breast Cancer.",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Nonoperative but systemic therapy as first-line management is offered to some patients with breast cancer (BC) who have assumed limited life expectancy, such as older women or those who have distant metastases at initial presentation. We evaluated rates of and predicting factors for success and failure of this therapy approach. METHODS: Seventy-five patients who were initially treated only systemically, and cases in which local control while avoiding surgery was the intended long-term therapy goal were analyzed. Additionally, two stage-dependent subgroups were distinguished (A: stage I-III, n = 31; B: stage IV, n = 44). Failure of therapy was defined as when secondary surgery had to be performed due to locoregional progression or in case of no surgery when severe locoregional clinical signs/symptoms were observed during the further course. RESULTS: Patients in group A were older than those in group B (81 vs. 67.5 years; P <0.001) and showed an increased survival (5-year rates: 40.2% vs. 24.3%). In 24 patients of the entire cohort (32%), secondary surgery had to be performed; surgery was performed more often in group A (58.1% vs. 13.6%). In the cases in which no surgery was performed (n = 51), 11 women (21.6%) suffered from severe locoregional symptoms in the palliative situation (A: n = 1; B: n = 10). Although the presence of stage IV was a significant factor for therapy success (odds ratio (OR), 2.59; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.95-7.05; P = 0.039), skin involvement was associated with failure of therapy (OR, 3.57; 95% CI, 1.16-11.11; P = 0.031). CONCLUSIONS: Nonoperative treatment may be offered to selected patients with BC who have assumed limited life expectancy. These women must be openly informed that this approach is not successful in nearly half of the cases.",
author = "Schmid, {Seraina Margaretha} and Modlasiak, {Aleksandra Anna} and Myrick, {Mary Elizabeth} and Nerbil Kilic and Viehl, {Carsten Thomas} and Andreas Sch{\"o}tzau and Uwe G{\"u}th",
year = "2011",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "18",
pages = "2166--2172",
journal = "ANN SURG ONCOL",
issn = "1068-9265",
publisher = "Springer New York",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Success and Failure of Primary Medical, Nonoperative Management In Breast Cancer.

AU - Schmid, Seraina Margaretha

AU - Modlasiak, Aleksandra Anna

AU - Myrick, Mary Elizabeth

AU - Kilic, Nerbil

AU - Viehl, Carsten Thomas

AU - Schötzau, Andreas

AU - Güth, Uwe

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - BACKGROUND: Nonoperative but systemic therapy as first-line management is offered to some patients with breast cancer (BC) who have assumed limited life expectancy, such as older women or those who have distant metastases at initial presentation. We evaluated rates of and predicting factors for success and failure of this therapy approach. METHODS: Seventy-five patients who were initially treated only systemically, and cases in which local control while avoiding surgery was the intended long-term therapy goal were analyzed. Additionally, two stage-dependent subgroups were distinguished (A: stage I-III, n = 31; B: stage IV, n = 44). Failure of therapy was defined as when secondary surgery had to be performed due to locoregional progression or in case of no surgery when severe locoregional clinical signs/symptoms were observed during the further course. RESULTS: Patients in group A were older than those in group B (81 vs. 67.5 years; P <0.001) and showed an increased survival (5-year rates: 40.2% vs. 24.3%). In 24 patients of the entire cohort (32%), secondary surgery had to be performed; surgery was performed more often in group A (58.1% vs. 13.6%). In the cases in which no surgery was performed (n = 51), 11 women (21.6%) suffered from severe locoregional symptoms in the palliative situation (A: n = 1; B: n = 10). Although the presence of stage IV was a significant factor for therapy success (odds ratio (OR), 2.59; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.95-7.05; P = 0.039), skin involvement was associated with failure of therapy (OR, 3.57; 95% CI, 1.16-11.11; P = 0.031). CONCLUSIONS: Nonoperative treatment may be offered to selected patients with BC who have assumed limited life expectancy. These women must be openly informed that this approach is not successful in nearly half of the cases.

AB - BACKGROUND: Nonoperative but systemic therapy as first-line management is offered to some patients with breast cancer (BC) who have assumed limited life expectancy, such as older women or those who have distant metastases at initial presentation. We evaluated rates of and predicting factors for success and failure of this therapy approach. METHODS: Seventy-five patients who were initially treated only systemically, and cases in which local control while avoiding surgery was the intended long-term therapy goal were analyzed. Additionally, two stage-dependent subgroups were distinguished (A: stage I-III, n = 31; B: stage IV, n = 44). Failure of therapy was defined as when secondary surgery had to be performed due to locoregional progression or in case of no surgery when severe locoregional clinical signs/symptoms were observed during the further course. RESULTS: Patients in group A were older than those in group B (81 vs. 67.5 years; P <0.001) and showed an increased survival (5-year rates: 40.2% vs. 24.3%). In 24 patients of the entire cohort (32%), secondary surgery had to be performed; surgery was performed more often in group A (58.1% vs. 13.6%). In the cases in which no surgery was performed (n = 51), 11 women (21.6%) suffered from severe locoregional symptoms in the palliative situation (A: n = 1; B: n = 10). Although the presence of stage IV was a significant factor for therapy success (odds ratio (OR), 2.59; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.95-7.05; P = 0.039), skin involvement was associated with failure of therapy (OR, 3.57; 95% CI, 1.16-11.11; P = 0.031). CONCLUSIONS: Nonoperative treatment may be offered to selected patients with BC who have assumed limited life expectancy. These women must be openly informed that this approach is not successful in nearly half of the cases.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 18

SP - 2166

EP - 2172

JO - ANN SURG ONCOL

JF - ANN SURG ONCOL

SN - 1068-9265

IS - 8

M1 - 8

ER -