Since 1960 more than 3000 consecutive patients with operable infiltrating breast carcinoma were treated by radiation therapy with or without primary limited surgery, which usually consisted of local excision. For tumors smaller than or equal to 5 cm the ten-year crude survival rate is 77% for patients without palpable axillary nodes (T1-2N0) and 63% for patients having axillary adenopathy (T1-2N0). For operable tumors exceeding 5 cm of diameter (T3N0-1) the ten-year crude survival is 34%. Thirty-five percent of the patients alive free of disease at ten years required a secondary operation for presumed local or regional tumor persistence or recurrence, although no residual disease was found in 24% of the operative specimens. Local-regional recurrence had no adverse effect on ten-year survival. This conservative approach offers most women with operable breast cancer an excellent chance at breast preservation with the same chance for ten-year survival as with radical mastectomy.
Background
Breast cancer and cardiovascular disease (CVD) share common risk factors, and breast cancer therapies are well known to cause cardiotoxicity. Prior studies highlighted the higher burden coronary artery disease and the importance to further assess its consequences on breast cancer patients.
Purpose
We sought to evaluate the revascularization rate and in-hospital short-term outcomes of breast cancer patients following acute coronary syndrome (ACS) compared to the general female population.
Methods
We reviewed the Nationwide Inpatient Sample from 2010 to 2014 to identify female patients with principal diagnosis of ACS (ST-elevation and non ST-elevation myocardial infarction, and unstable angina). Two subgroups were identified, women with a history of breast cancer and women without, and were propensity matched.
Multivariate regression analyses were performed to evaluate the impact of breast cancer on primary outcome (in-hospital mortality) and secondary outcomes: occurrence of shock, acute kidney injury (AKI), mechanical ventilation (MV), and length of stay (LOS). We also compared the rate of cardiac procedures. Statistical significance of odd ratios (OR) is defined with p-value<0.05 and reported 95% confidence intervals (CI).
Results
We identified a total of 245,563 female patients with primary diagnosis of ACS, among them 10,625 (4.3%) had a history of breast cancer. The comorbidity of breast cancer was associated with statistically significant lower rates of mortality (OR 0.83, CI 0.74–0.94), shock (OR 0.87, CI 0.77–0.99), AKI (OR 0.90, CI 0.82–0.98), MV (OR 0.81, CI 0.71–0.92) and relative 5.4% decrease in LOS (CI: −7.8%, −3.0%). The cardiac procedural rates were similar for left heart catheterization (OR 0.96, CI 0.90–1.02), for percutaneous coronary intervention (OR 0.95, CI 0.89–1.02) and for CABG (OR 0.88, CI 0.78–1.00) compared to control group.
Conclusion
Breast cancer patients received a comparable catheterization and revascularization procedure rate and exhibited a statistically significant lower morbidity and mortality rates during hospitalization after an ACS event compared to the general female population.
Funding Acknowledgement
Type of funding source: None
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.