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Adjuvant treatment recommendations for early breast cancer aged 69-70 are weakening

Between the ages of 69 and 70, recommendations for adjuvant treatment for early-stage breast cancer wanes, according to study findings. International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, Physics Published online in the latest edition.

Wesley J. Talcott and colleagues at Yale University identified two cohorts of any age who underwent mastectomy for early-stage breast cancer between 2004 and 2017, with strong indications for adjuvant treatment.

Cohort 1 had 160,990 participants and was at higher risk and eligible for radiation therapy.

Cohort 2 had 394,946 participants, had hormone receptor positivity with tumors smaller than 5 mm, and had received endocrine therapy.

In Cohort 1, the research team found that the recommendation for radiation therapy dropped sharply at age 70, from 90 to 92% at age 50 to 69 to 81% at age 70.

At age 69 versus age 70, the annual age difference was a separate predictor of adjuvant radiation recommendation (odds ratio, 0.47).

For cohort 2, there was a slight decrease in endocrine therapy recommendation among 70-year-old participants, and the only annual age-specific difference for endocrine therapy index recommendation was for 70-year-old versus 69-year-old predictors.

“We saw a unique decline in the recommendation of appropriate adjuvant therapy between the ages of 69 and 70. This is a previously unexplained phenomenon in early stage breast cancer.”

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