Risk of Lymphedema and Death after Lymph Node Dissection with Neoadjuvant and Adjuvant Treatments in Patients with Breast Cancer: An Eight-Year Nationwide Cohort Study

Author:

Lee Ye-Seul1ORCID,Lim Yu-Cheol1ORCID,Yeo Jiyoon2ORCID,Kim Song-Yi3ORCID,Lee Yoon Jae1ORCID,Ha In-Hyuk1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Jaseng Spine and Joint Research Institute, Jaseng Medical Foundation, 540 Gangnam-daero, Seoul 06110, Republic of Korea

2. Department of Economics, Korea University, Seoul 02841, Republic of Korea

3. Department of Acupoint and Anatomy, College of Korean Medicine, Gachon University, Seongnam 13120, Republic of Korea

Abstract

Knowledge on the impact of neoadjuvant and adjuvant treatments on post-surgery lymphedema (LE) in patients with breast cancer is limited due to methodological limitations and an insufficient sample size. We investigated the risk of LE in patients going through long-term anticancer treatment regimens using a national cohort from the Korean National Health Insurance Service database from 2011–2013. Incidence rate ratio, Kaplan–Meier analysis, and Cox proportional regression analysis were performed. A total of 39,791 patients were included. While minimal lymph node dissection (SLNB) reduced the risk of LE (hazard ratio [HR] 0.51) as expected, neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) followed by SLNB did not reduce the risk. Adjusting for adjuvant chemotherapy (AC) as time-varying exposure decreased the risk of LE in the SLNB group (HR 0.51), but not the mortality risk (HR 0.861). A longer duration of NAC, especially taxane-based, combined with SLNB reversed the effect and increased risk of LE. The findings highlight the importance of not only early surveillance before and after surgery, but also long-term surveillance during adjuvant treatment by surgeons and oncologists in order to reduce the risk of LE.

Funder

Korea Health Technology R&D Project through the Korea Health Industry Development Institute

Ministry of Health and Welfare, Republic of Korea

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health Information Management,Health Informatics,Health Policy,Leadership and Management

Reference46 articles.

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