Fiche publication
Date publication
octobre 2014
Auteurs
Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr PETIT Thierry
Tous les auteurs :
Fekih M, Petit T, Zarca D, Guinebretiere JM, Andre F, Pierga JY, Namer M, Gligorov J, Delaloge S
Lien Pubmed
Résumé
Adjuvant chemotherapy for localised breast cancer aims at reducing the risk of relapse and at increasing overall survival. Decision criteria include tumour burden and biological profile. It appears currently difficult to evaluate the benefit/risk ratio in certain borderline cases, which are more and more frequent. We have evaluated through an anonymous web survey conducted as part of the 2013 Annual Saint-Paul-de-Vence breast conference, the chemotherapy decisions, use of guidelines and level of certainty with decisions in this type of situation through four clinical cases. The survey was proposed to 1,190 French physicians who are directly in charge of breast cancer care, whatever their specialty. Three hundred and fifty-three of them replied, of whom 67 % were oncologists and 15 % surgeons. A significantly heterogeneous decision was observed for two out of four cases, in which 52 and 69 % of the physicians opted for adjuvant chemotherapy, versus 48 and 21 % for abstention respectively. Eighty seven percent of responding physicians used guidelines to guide their decision. These guidelines were regional for 63 %, national for 36 %, local in 21 % and international in 16 % of the cases. The level of certainty varied with clinical cases but not with the physician's specialty, nor type of decision.
Référence
Bull Cancer. 2014 Oct;101(10):918-24