Clinical Evidence for Locoregional Surgery of the Primary Tumor in Patients with De Novo Stage IV Breast Cancer

Background Whether primary tumor surgery is better than no surgery in patients with de novo stage IV breast cancer remains controversial. Methods This study combined prospective clinical trials and a multicenter cohort to evaluate the impact of locoregional surgery in de novo stage IV breast cancer....

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Annals of surgical oncology 2021-09, Vol.28 (9), p.5059-5070
Hauptverfasser: Yu, Yunfang, Hong, Huangming, Wang, Ying, Fu, Tuping, Chen, Yongjian, Zhao, Jianli, Chen, Peixian, Cai, Ruizhao, Tan, Yujie, He, Zifan, Ren, Wei, Zhou, Lihuan, Huang, Junhao, Tang, Jun, Ye, Guolin, Yao, Herui
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Background Whether primary tumor surgery is better than no surgery in patients with de novo stage IV breast cancer remains controversial. Methods This study combined prospective clinical trials and a multicenter cohort to evaluate the impact of locoregional surgery in de novo stage IV breast cancer. The GRADE approach was used to assess the quality of evidence in meta-analysis, and propensity score matching analysis was used in the cohort study. This study was registered with PROSPERO CRD42016043766 and ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04456855. Results A total of 1110 patients from six trials and 353 patients from the cohort study were included. The meta-analysis showed that compared with no surgery, locoregional surgery did not prolong overall survival (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.90, P  = 0.40; moderate-quality) but had a significantly longer locoregional progression-free survival (HR = 0.23, P <  0.001; moderate-quality). The subgroup analysis of solitary bone-only metastasis (HR = 0.47, P  = 0.04; high-quality) resulted in prolonged overall survival. In the cohort study, locoregional surgery showed a survival benefit (HR = 0.63, P  = 0.041) before matching, but not (HR = 0.84, P  = 0.579) after matching. Patients with bone-only metastasis showed a survival advantage in surgery compared with no surgery before matching (HR = 0.36, P  = 0.034) as well as after matching (HR = 0.18, P  = 0.017). Conclusions This study indicated that locoregional surgery had a significantly longer locoregional progression-free survival than no surgery in de novo stage IV breast cancer, and patients with bone-only metastasis tended to show an overall survival benefit from surgery.
ISSN:1068-9265
1534-4681
DOI:10.1245/s10434-021-09650-3