作者
Casimir A.E. Kouwenberg,K.M. de Ligt,Leonieke W. Kranenburg,Hinne A. Rakhorst,Daniëlle de Leeuw,Sabine Siesling,Jan J. V. Busschbach,Marc A.M. Mureau
摘要
Background: Differences in quality-of-life outcomes after different surgical
breast cancer treatment options, including breast reconstruction, are relevant
for counseling individual patients in clinical decision-making, and for (societal) evaluations such as cost-effectiveness analyses. However, current literature shows contradictory results, because of use of different patient-reported
outcome measures and study designs with limited patient numbers. The authors set out to improve this evidence using patient-reported outcome measures in a large, cross-sectional study for different surgical breast cancer treatment options.
Methods: Quality of life was assessed through the EQ-5D-5L, European
Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaires C30 and BR23, and the BREAST-Q. Patients with different
treatments were compared after propensity-weighted adjustment of pretreatment differences. The EQ-5D was used to value the effect of surgical
complications.
Results: A total of 1871 breast cancer patients participated (breast-conserving
surgery, n = 615; mastectomy, n = 507; autologous reconstruction, n = 330;
and implant-based reconstruction, n = 419). Mastectomy patients reported
the lowest EQ-5D score (mastectomy, 0.805, breast-conserving surgery, 0.844;
autologous reconstruction, 0.849; and implant-based reconstruction, 0.850)
and functioning scores of the C30 questionnaire. On the BREAST-Q, autologous reconstruction patients had higher mean Satisfaction with Outcome,
Satisfaction with Breasts, and Sexual Well-being scores than implant-based
reconstruction patients. Complications in autologous reconstruction patients
resulted in a substantially lower quality of life than in implant-based reconstruction patients.
Conclusions: This study shows the added value of breast conservation and
reconstruction compared with mastectomy; however, differences among breastconserving surgery, implant-based reconstruction, and autologous breast reconstruction were subtle. Complications resulted in poorer health-related
quality of life. (Plast. Reconstr. Surg. 146: 1, 2020.)