Annals of Surgery

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Annals of Surgery:
August 2005 - Volume 242 - Issue 2 - pp 276-280
Original Articles

Patients' Refusal of Surgery Strongly Impairs Breast Cancer Survival

Verkooijen, Helena M. MD, PhD; Fioretta, Gérald M. BsC; Rapiti, Elisabetta MD, MPH; Bonnefoi, Hervé MD; Vlastos, Georges MD; Kurtz, John MD; Schaefer, Peter MD; Sappino, André-Pascal MD; Schubert, Hyma MA; Bouchardy, Christine MD, PhD

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Abstract

Objective: To compare patient and tumor characteristics and survival between women who refused and women who accepted surgery for breast cancer.

Summary Background Data: Surgery represents the central component of curative breast cancer treatment, but some women decide not to undergo surgery. Recent studies on the prognosis of non operated breast cancer are nonexistent.

Patients and Methods: This study included all 5339 patients aged < 80 years with nonmetastatic breast cancer recorded at the Geneva Cancer Registry between 1975 and 2000. We consulted the clinical files of all nonoperated women to identify those who refused surgery. Patients who refused surgery were compared with those accepting surgery using logistic regression. The effect of refusal of surgery on breast cancer mortality was evaluated by Cox proportional hazards analysis.

Results: Seventy patients (1.3%) refused surgery. These women were older, more frequently single, and had larger tumors. Overall, 37 (53%) women had no treatment, 25 (36%) hormone-therapy alone, and 8 (11%) other adjuvant treatments alone or in combination. Five-year specific breast cancer survival of women who refused surgery was lower than that of those who accepted (72%, 95% confidence interval, 60%-84% versus 87%, 95% confidence interval, 86%-88%, respectively). After accounting for other prognostic factors including tumor characteristics and stage, women who refused surgery had a 2.1-fold (95% confidence interval, 1.5-3.1) increased risk to die of breast cancer compared with operated women.

Conclusions: Women who refuse surgery for breast cancer have a strongly impaired survival. This information might help patients who are hesitant toward surgery make a better informed decision.

© 2005 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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