Factors Affecting Time to Surgery in Breast Cancer Patients

Author:

Chagpar Anees B.1,Howard-McNatt Marissa2,Chiba Akiko2,Levine Edward A.2,Gass Jennifer S.3,Gallagher Kristalyn4,Lum Sharon5,Martinez Ricardo6,Willis Allric I.5,Fenton Andrew6,Solomon Naveenraj L.5,Senthil Magi5,Edmonson David3,Namm Jukes P.5,Walters Laura7,Brown Eric7,Murray Mary6,Ollila David4,Dupont Elisabeth8,Garcia-Cantu Carlos6

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Surgery, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA

2. Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina

3. Women and Infants Hospital, Providence, RI

4. Cleveland Clinic Akron, Akron, OH

5. Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, CA

6. Doctors Hospital at Renaissance, Edinburg, TX

7. Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA

8. Beaumont Hospital, Troy, MI

Abstract

Background We sought to determine factors affecting time to surgery (TTS) to identify potential modifiable factors to improve timeliness of care. Methods Patients with clinical stage 0-3 breast cancer undergoing partial mastectomy in 2 clinical trials, conducted in ten centers across the US, were analyzed. No preoperative workup was mandated by the study; those receiving neoadjuvant therapy were excluded. Results The median TTS among the 583 patients in this cohort was 34 days (range: 1-289). Patient age, race, tumor palpability, and genomic subtype did not influence timeliness of care defined as TTS ≤30 days. Hispanic patients less likely to have a TTS ≤30 days ( P = .001). There was significant variation in TTS by surgeon ( P < .001); those practicing in an academic center more likely to have TTS ≤30 days than those in a community setting (55.1% vs 19.3%, P < .001). Patients who had a preoperative ultrasound had a similar TTS to those who did not (TTS ≤30 days 41.9% vs 51.9%, respectively, P = .109), but those who had a preoperative MRI had a significantly increased TTS (TTS ≤30 days 25.0% vs 50.9%, P < .001). On multivariate analysis, patient ethnicity was no longer significantly associated with TTS ≤30 ( P = .150). Rather, use of MRI (OR: .438; 95% CI: .287-.668, P < .001) and community practice type (OR: .324; 95% CI: .194-.541, P < .001) remained independent predictors of lower likelihood of TTS ≤30 days. Conclusions Preoperative MRI significantly increases time to surgery; surgeons should consider this in deciding on its use.

Funder

David and Katie Burke Fund for Breast Cancer Research

Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of North Carolina

Yale Cancer Center

Cleveland Clinic Akron General Operations

Troy Cancer Program

Watson Clinic Center for Research Inc

Cleveland Clinic Akron Foundation

Connecticut Breast Health Initiative

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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