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Poster viewing and lunch

164P - Adjuvant Radiation Therapy Amongst Immigrant and Canadian-born/Long-term Resident Women with Breast Cancer

Date

12 May 2023

Session

Poster viewing and lunch

Presenters

Ashley Eom

Citation

Annals of Oncology (2023) 8 (1suppl_4): 101221-101221. 10.1016/esmoop/esmoop101221

Authors

A. Eom1, D. Kirkwood2, N. Hodgson1, A. Doumouras1, J. Bogach1, T. Whelan1, M. Levine1, E. Parvez1

Author affiliations

  • 1 McMaster University, Hamilton/CA
  • 2 ICES - Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, Toronto/CA

Resources

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Abstract 164P

Background

Appropriate adjuvant radiation therapy (RT) after breast cancer surgery is an important quality of care metric. Cancer treatment experience for immigrant women may differ due to challenges in navigating the health care system. This study compares the proportion of immigrant and Canadian born/long-term resident women receiving adjuvant RT and time to RT.

Methods

A population-level retrospective cohort-study using linked provincial administrative databases was conducted including women >=18 years of age with Stage I-III breast cancer diagnosed between 2010-2016 in Ontario, Canada. Women were classified as immigrants using the federal database if they arrived in Canada in or after 1985, and as Canadian-born/long-term residents if they were born in Canada or arrived prior to 1985. Dependent variables (age, co-morbidity, socioeconomic factors, stage, and treatments) were collected. Data on proportion of women undergoing RT and time from surgery to RT was collected. Multivariable analysis was performed adjusting for dependent variables.

Results

Out of 54,090 patients, 46,930 (86.8%) were Canadian-born/long-term residents and 7,160 (13.2%) were immigrants. Immigrants were younger at diagnosis (54.3 vs. 63.0 years) and more often had Stage III disease (16.8% vs. 13.9%). Odds of receiving RT after breast conserving surgery (BCS) was 0.86 (95% CI 0.78-0.95), and 0.98 (95% CI 0.86-1.12) after mastectomy. Mean time from any surgery to RT was longer for immigrants (126.9 days vs. 117.1 days, p<0.001). Using a multivariable piecewise Cox regression model, excluding patients who received adjuvant chemotherapy before radiation, the hazard ratio for receipt of RT within 90 days for immigrants compared to Canadian long-term residents was 0.87 (95% CI; 0.83-0.92). Amongst immigrants, women from Latin America and the Caribbean had the longest wait times. There were no differences based on length of stay in Canada or immigration class.

Conclusions

Our study demonstrates a lower proportion of immigrant women receiving RT after BCS compared to Canadian-born/long-term resident women in Ontario, and a longer wait time for adjuvant RT. Further research is needed to explore system, provider, and patient factors that may be driving this difference.

Legal entity responsible for the study

The authors.

Funding

Funding for this study was provided by the McMaster Buffett Taylor Chair in Breast Cancer Research. Dr. Parvez is supported through career grant HHS Foundation W.E. Noonan Fellowship.

Disclosure

T. Whelan: Other, Personal, Other, In Kind sponsorship, unrelated to this work: Exact Sciences. All other authors have declared no conflicts of interest.

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