Masters Degrees (Radiation Oncology)
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Browsing Masters Degrees (Radiation Oncology) by Subject "Breast -- Cancer"
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- ItemBreast cancer diagnosed in women with the Human Immune-Deficiency Virus (HIV)(Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2014-12) Langenhoven, Lizanne; Barnardt, Pieter; Stellenbosch University. Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences. Dept. of Medical Imaging and Clinical Oncology. Radiation Oncology.ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Background: HIV is the defining pandemic of our era, with an estimated 5.9 million people infected in South Africa according to World Health Organization (WHO) estimates for 2011. The expression and treatment of non-AIDS defining cancers has become an important consideration in this cohort, as antiretroviral therapy (ART) has prolonged survival in a subgroup previously at risk of early mortality. Study Design: A retrospective cohort study of all women seen at the Combined Breast Cancer Clinic at Tygerberg Hospital between January 2010 and December 2011, stratified into three subgroups based on HIV status. Methods: Of the 816 patients screened, 586 met inclusion criteria; of which 31 (5.3%) patients were HIV positive, 420 (71.7%) HIV negative, and 135 (23%) had an unknown HIV status. The disease phenotype was described in each subgroup, as well as toxicities associated with standard chemotherapy regimens, with an emphasis on completion rates of systemic cytotoxic treatment. The insult of cytotoxic therapy to the CD4 count was described for this cohort. Results: Women with HIV had a statistically significant (p<0.001) younger age at presentation of breast cancer with a median age of 42 years (range 39 – 45 years) in comparison with the HIV-negative cohort with a median age of 54 years (range 53 – 55 years) . No difference was detected in disease phenotype when stage at presentation (p=0.7874), histological subtype (p=0.3375), grade of differentiation (p=0.8297), nodal involvement (p=0.0998) or hormone-receptor positivity (p=0.6285) was considered. Completion rates for systemic chemotherapy were excellent (>90%) regardless of HIV-status and no statistically significant toxicity was observed. The median CD4 count at diagnosis was 477 cells/μL (range 234 – 807 cells/μL), with a nadir value of 333 cells/μL (range 62 – 713 cells/μL), representing a decrease of 30.2% during treatment. One case of suspected treatment-related mortality was recorded. Conclusion: This retrospective study confirmed that women infected with HIV had a younger age at breast cancer diagnosis when compared to women with a negative HIV-status. No difference in disease phenotype could be demonstrated for women with HIV, denoting the coexistence of two common chronic diseases. Chemotherapy was tolerated well, but caused a median decline in CD4-count of 30% during treatment.