Background. This study was undertaken to evaluate the impact of prognostic factors on the locoregional failure-free survival of early breast cancer patients. Methods. In this single-institutional study, 213 breast cancer patients were retrospectively analysed. Fifty-five of 213 patients were ≤40 years of age at diagnosis. The impact of patient- or treatment-related factors on the locoregional failure-free survival was assessed using the Kaplan-Meier method. The simultaneous impact of factors on the locoregional failure-free survival was assessed using the Cox proportional hazards regression analysis. Results. The median follow-up time of the censored patients was 22 months (mean 28 months, range 392 months). On univariate analysis, statistically significant factors for the locoregional failure-free survival were the age (≤40 versus 40 years), T stage (Tis, T0-2 versus T3-4), molecular tumor type (luminal A versus luminal B, Her2neu overexpression, or triple negative), and lymphovascular status (LV0 versus LV1). On multivariate analysis, age and T stage remained statistically significant. Conclusions. Being 40 years or younger has a statistically significant independent adverse impact on the locoregional failure-free survival of patients with early breast cancer. © Copyright 2012 Volker Rudat et al.
CITATION STYLE
Rudat, V., El-Sweilmeen, H., Fadel, E., Brune-Erber, I., Ahmad Nour, A., Bushnag, Z., … Altuwaijri, S. (2012). Age of 40 years or younger is an independent risk factor for locoregional failure in early breast cancer: A single-institutional analysis in Saudi Arabia. Journal of Oncology. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/370385
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