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Changes in weight, physical and psychosocial patient-reported outcomes among obese women receiving treatment for early-stage breast cancer: A nationwide clinical study.

Authors :
Di Meglio, Antonio
Michiels, Stefan
Jones, Lee W.
El-Mouhebb, Mayssam
Ferreira, Arlindo R.
Martin, Elise
Matias, Margarida
Lohmann, Ana Elisa
Joly, Florence
Vanlemmens, Laurence
Everhard, Sibille
Martin, Anne-Laure
Lemonnier, Jerome
Arveux, Patrick
Cottu, Paul H.
Coutant, Charles
Del Mastro, Lucia
Partridge, Ann H.
André, Fabrice
Ligibel, Jennifer A.
Source :
Breast; Aug2020, Vol. 52, p23-32, 10p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Evidence on how weight loss correlates to health-related quality-of-life (HRQOL) among obese breast cancer (BC) patients is limited. We aimed to evaluate associations between weight changes and HRQOL. We included 993 obese women with stage I-II-III BC from CANTO, a multicenter, prospective cohort collecting longitudinal, objectively-assessed anthropometric measures and HRQOL data (NCT01993498). Associations between weight changes (±5% between diagnosis and post-treatment [shortly after completion of surgery, adjuvant chemo- or radiation-therapy]) and patient-reported HRQOL (EORTC QLQ-C30/B23) were comprehensively evaluated. Changes in HRQOL and odds of severely impaired HRQOL were assessed using multivariable generalized estimating equations and logistic regression, respectively. 14.1% women gained weight, 67.3% remained stable and 18.6% lost weight. Significant decreases in functional status and exacerbation of symptoms were observed overall post-treatment. Compared to gaining weight or remaining stable, obese women who lost weight experienced less of a decline in HRQOL, reporting better physical function (mean change [95%CI] for gain, stability and loss: −12.9 [-16.5,-9.3], −6.9 [-8.2,-5.5] and −6.2 [-8.7,-3.7]; p interaction[weight-change-by-time] = 0.006), less dyspnea (+18.9 [+12.3,+25.6], +9.2 [+6.5,+11.9] and +3.2 [-1.0,+7.3]; p interaction = 0.0003), and fewer breast symptoms (+22.1 [+16.8,+27.3], +18.0 [+15.7,+20.3] and +13.4 [+9.0,+17.2]; p interaction = 0.044). Weight loss was also significantly associated with reduced odds of severe pain compared with weight gain (OR [95%CI] = 0.51 [0.31–0.86], p = 0.011) or stability (OR [95%CI] = 0.62 [0.41–0.95], p = 0.029). No associations between weight loss and worsening of other physical or psychosocial parameters were found. This large contemporary study suggests that weight loss among obese BC patients during early survivorship was associated with better patient-reported outcomes, without evidence of worsened functionality or symptomatology in any domain of HRQOL. • One-in-five women was obese at diagnosis of early breast cancer. • Patient-reported quality of life significantly worsened after breast cancer treatment. • Weight changes were associated to changes in quality of life post-treatment. • Weight loss was not associated with worse functionality or symptomatology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09609776
Volume :
52
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Breast
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
143826089
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.breast.2020.04.002