To examine clinicodemographic determinants associated with breast cancer survivorship follow-up during COVID-19. Methods: We performed a retrospective, population-based cohort study including early stage (Stage I-II) breast cancer patients who underwent resection between 2006 and 2018 in a New York City hospital system. The primary outcome was oncologic follow-up prior to and during the COVID-19 pandemic. Secondary analyses compared differences in follow-up by COVID-19 case rates stratified by ZIP code. Results: A total of 2942 patients with early-stage breast cancer were available for analysis. 1588 (54%) of patients had attended follow-up in the year prior to the COVID-19 period but failed to continue to followup during the pandemic, either in-person or via telemedicine. 1242 (42%) patients attended a follow-up appointment during the COVID-19 pandemic. Compared with patients who did not present for follow-up during COVID-19, patients who continued their oncologic follow-up during the pandemic were younger (p ¼ 0.049) more likely to have received adjuvant radiation therapy (p ¼ 0.025), and have lower household income (p ¼ 0.031) on multivariate modeling. When patients who live in Bronx, New York, were stratified by ZIP code, there was a modest negative association (r ¼ À0.56) between COVID-19 cases and proportion of patients who continued to follow-up during the COVID-19 period.
Conclusion:We observed a dramatic disruption in routine breast cancer follow-up during the COVID-19 pandemic. Providers and health systems should emphasize reintegrating patients who missed appointments during COVID-19 back into regular surveillance programs to avoid significant morbidity and mortality from missed breast cancer recurrences.
Purpose/Objective(s)
The COVID-19 pandemic has placed a tremendous burden on healthcare systems and has forced oncology providers and cancer patients to balance pandemic risks with maintaining standard cancer survivorship care. We evaluated adherence to long-term follow-up among early-stage breast cancer patients in an urban, academic cancer center in the New York City borough of The Bronx during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Materials/Methods
We retrospectively reviewed patients with stage I-II breast cancer who underwent resection and adjuvant therapy at our center. Adherence with long-term follow-up was evaluated based on contact with any oncology specialist (surgical, medical, or radiation) at our center between two and five years after breast cancer surgery. Patients were deemed adherent to follow-up during COVID-19 if they attended an oncology follow-up appointment (in-person or telemedicine) between March 1 and December 1, 2020; patients were deemed non-adherent if they attended follow-up during the same date range in 2019, prior to the pandemic, but did not follow-up during the COVID-19 period. Adherence during COVID-19 was compared with pre-COVID rates of follow-up. Clinical and demographic data were evaluated as potential predictors of adherence. Local COVID-19 case rates were estimated from public data by ZIP code during the peak of the pandemic in April 2020. Multivariate logistic regression was performed to identify associations with follow-up non-adherence.
Results
During COVID-19, 496 (68%) of 734 patients were adherent to follow-up. Of the adherent group, 40.5% had telemedicine visits. The rate of follow-up adherence during COVID-19 was dramatically lower than historic adherence rates of 89-96%, which varied depending on time since resection. On multivariate analysis, adherence was more likely among patients who had received adjuvant radiation therapy (adjusted Odds Ratio [aOR] 1.4;
P
=
0.032
)
and smokers (aOR 1.6;
P
=
0.041
)
. When patients who live in The Bronx were stratified by ZIP code, there was no association (R
2
= 0.01) between local COVID-19 case rates and likelihood of adherence during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Conclusion
To our knowledge, this is the first analysis evaluating the potential effect of COVID-19 on cancer survivorship care. We observed a dramatic disruption in long-term follow-up during the COVID-19 period, despite prevalent utilization of telemedicine visits. Overall, if the observed rate of non-adherence persists and patients are not reintegrated into regular follow-up patterns after the COVID-19 period, it has the potential to dramatically affect cancer survival outcomes.
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