Metastatic breast cancer: Do current treatments improve quality of life? A prospective study

ABSTRACT CONTEXT AND OBJECTIVE: In metastatic breast cancer cases, the currently available therapeutic approaches provide minimal improvement in survival. As such, quality of life (QOL) becomes one of the main objectives of treatment. It is not known whether current treatments derived from trials improve QOL. The aim was to evaluate changes in QOL among metastatic breast cancer patients receiving treatment derived from trials. DESIGN AND SETTING: Prospective observational QOL survey in a tertiary cancer center. METHODS: To evaluate the influence of current treatments on patients’ QOL, the Medical Outcomes Study Short Form-36 (SF-36) and the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) were applied on three occasions: before starting treatment and at the 6th and 12th weeks, to consecutive metastatic breast cancer patients over a one-year period. RESULTS: We found an improvement in QOL in the sample evaluated (n = 40), expressed by changes in the overall SF-36 score (p = 0.002) and the BDI (p = 0.004). Taken individually, the SF-36 components Pain, Social Functioning and Mental Health also improved significantly. Patients with worse initial performance status and secondary symptoms displayed greater improvement than those with better initial performance status and asymptomatic disease (p < 0.001). Patients who received more than one type of therapy showed larger gains than those given only one type (p = 0.038). CONCLUSIONS: In our environment, current metastatic breast cancer treatments can improve QOL, especially among symptomatic patients and those with low performance status.


INTRODUCTION
Breast cancer is the form of cancer with highest incidence among women, worldwide.Women are born with a one-in-eight chance of having breast cancer during their lives.After disease recurrence, the mean survival ranges from two to three years, although it may reach up to ten years. 1,2During this time span, patients experience debilitating symptoms and collateral effects from the treatment. 3As such, metastatic breast cancer should be viewed as a chronic disease, with treatment that is essentially intended to palliate the symptoms, improve the quality of life and increase the survival. 4istorically, it has been difficult to demonstrate overall survival improvement in metastatic breast cancer patients.Although treatments developed recently have proven to be capable of prolonging the survival in metastatic breast cancer cases, the time span is not considerable. 5,6In a meta-analysis, 189 randomized clinical trials published from 1975 to 1997 were evaluated with the aim of defi ning the effectiveness of the medical treatment.The most important fi nding was the conclusion that the relevance of the results was limited by the modest survival benefi t achieved, and also by the lack of assessment of how such treatments affected the patients' quality of life, because only 9.5% of the patients were so assessed. 5Therefore, quality of life has become a parameter that is as important as survival, response rates and toxicity for evaluating therapeutic approaches and defi ning the medical procedure to be adopted. 7,8n this light, quality of life has been assessed in clinical trials relating to prevention 9 and adjuvancy, 10 and in phase III studies. 11,12umerous quality-of-life evaluation instruments have been developed over recent decades, with the aim of transforming this subjective concept into an objective and mea-surable parameter. 13Some of these instruments are generic, designed for use across a wide range of chronic diseases, such as the SF-36 (Short Form-36) Health Survey, while others have been developed specifi cally for oncological patients. 14The SF-36 Health Survey appears to be the most suitable, in relation to other generic health status measurement tools, since it presents the best ability to discriminate between groups 15 and has been used worldwide among cancer patients, [16][17][18] thereby facilitating comparisons of health-related quality of life between independent studies. 19Moreover, since it is multidimensional, sensitive to time progression and medical interventions, and easy to apply, it is a reliable method for evaluating changes in quality of life. 20otwithstanding the importance of assessing the quality of life among metastatic breast cancer patients, less than 4% of such publications mention quality of life. 21Because these studies, using quality of life as an outcome, usually compare two different treatment approaches, it is not known whether current metastatic breast cancer treatments derived from trials, improve quality of life.Due to lack of information on how such treatments affect the patient's quality of life, this issue remains an open question.

OBJECTIVE
To evaluate the impact of current types of treatment on the quality of life of patients newly diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer.

METHODS
This was a prospective observational study on the infl uence of current treatments on the quality of life of patients with metastatic breast cancer.secondary symptoms and hormone receptor status.The treatment and response assessment were determined by the attending physicians, and written up in the medical records.The use of analgesics and other symptom relief medications was at the discretion of the physician in charge.The patient's Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status was rated at each interview. 25reatments were classifi ed as follows: surgery, considered to be any invasive approach related to the metastatic sites, but not including procedures only used for diagnosis; chemotherapy, including the use of anti-cancer drugs administered by any means; hormonal treatment, i.e. chemical endocrine therapy; radiotherapy, including any form of application; and fi nally, clinical support, defi ned as any other medical intervention not included in the preceding items.The treatment was classifi ed as support only when no other therapeutic approach was employed.
For statistical analysis, the Friedman Test was used to compare the SF-36 and the BDI scores.Analysis of variance (ANOVA) was utilized to assess the effects of clinical characteristics, treatments and treatment response on the SF-36 and BDI scores (two-way ANOVA).The signifi cance level was set at 0.05.

RESULTS
Over this one-year period, 48 consecutive cases with diagnoses of metastatic breast cancer were enrolled in the study.One patient who died prior to the second interview, two who underwent treatment in other institutions and fi ve that did not attend the third interview were excluded from the study.Thus, 40 patients accomplished the program of three interviews that had been envisaged.The second interview was held between 25 and 46 days after treatment started, with a mean of 36 days (5.14 weeks), and the third was held between 66 and 88 days after treatment started, with a mean of 79 days (11.29 weeks).
The characteristics of the patients, the disease and the treatments administered and their interference with quality of life are presented in Table 2.
Presence of symptoms secondary to metastatic disease was a determining factor with regard to signifi cant gain in quality of life following treatment.Other characteristics of the disease were not determinants of change in quality of life.There was a signifi cant statistical difference between patients who underwent only one treatment and those given more than one type, with overall responses greater in the latter group.The patients' individual characteristics were unrelated to the change in the quality of life, except for the initial performance status, which presented an inverse correlation with the gain in quality of life (Table 2).

DISCUSSION
Analysis of our data showed that oncological treatment might improve the quality of life for metastatic breast cancer patients.Improvement was observed particularly in characteristics relating to pain, social functioning and mental health.The infl uence of pain on the quality of life of oncology patients has of São Paulo, Brazil, from July 2001 to June 2002.This hospital provides all the types of therapy normally utilized in such cases: chemotherapy, hormonal treatment, radiotherapy, surgery and clinical support.
The study was granted approval by the local research ethics committee.Over a oneyear period, consecutive breast cancer patients were considered eligible for inclusion in this study if they had a recent diagnosis of metastatic disease, had not yet started any related oncological treatment for this condition, and were able to complete the questionnaires.The Medical Outcomes SF-36 and the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) were applied on three occasions: at base line (prior to starting treatment) and at the 6 th and 12 th weeks of treatment (± one week of leeway for the patient's convenience in scheduling appointments).
SF-36 focuses on eight different domains of health-related quality of life: physical functioning, role limitations due to physical problems, social functioning, bodily pain, general mental health, role limitations due to emotional problems, vitality and general health perceptions, 20 and it has already been validated for populations in Brazil. 22The SF-36 results were calculated in accordance with the original publication: each domain scored from 0 to 100, from the worst to the best condition.The Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), comprising 21 items, scored from 0 to 3 from the best to the worst condition, was used for detection of symptoms related to depression. 23,24emographic variables were collected during the patient's fi rst interview.The clinical data collected included: time since diagnosis, disease staging and menopausal status at primary diagnosis, metastasis sites, presence of already been established: quality of life is inversely proportional to the severity of the pain experienced by patients. 26In a study relating to lung cancer, there was signifi cant deterioration in functional status and quality of life caused by chronic pain, secondary to the surgical resection procedure utilized. 27Although in the present study the pain levels and control measures adopted were not evaluated, our results show that the SF-36 pain scale had a strong infl uence on the change in the patients' quality of life over the course of the treatment, thus showing the importance of pain control in this population.Therefore, if oncological treatment is capable of controlling pain, the observed improvement in quality of life was not unexpected.
The BDI revealed symptoms of anxiety or depression in 26.2% of the interviewees, twelve weeks after they had received their diagnoses of metastatic disease, which is similar to reported rates. 28The signifi cant changes in the SF-36 mental score seen in our sample, together with the changes in the same direction and of similar magnitude shown by applying the BDI, substantiate the infl uence of metastatic breast cancer and the consequences of its treatment on the psychosocial characteristics of these patients.
Our study has shown that oncological treatment has the potential to enhance the quality of life of metastatic breast cancer patients, provided that they present symptomatic disease that does not have any proven prognostic value in relation to breast cancer.This fi nding is in accordance with previous studies. 29In 1996, the Outcomes Working Group of the American Society of Clinical Oncology stated that the improvement in quality of life for patients responding to treatment would probably be related to the fact that they presented symptoms secondary to metastatic disease. 8n spite of the advances in diagnosis and treatment seen over the last two decades, no consistent benefi t regarding survival has been shown through treatment of metastatic disease in asymptomatic breast cancer patients. 30his suggests that follow-up programs based on regular physical examinations and yearly mammography alone are as effective as the more intensive approaches based on regularly performing laboratory tests and using other diagnostic tools. 31,32The lack of increase in quality of life through treatment in such cases in the present study corroborates the idea that early diagnosis of asymptomatic metastatic breast disease is not advantageous.On the other hand, since there was a major improvement in quality of life among symptomatic patients, treatment is justifi ed even if it does not change survival. 30he quality of life among patients with the poorest performance status is benefi ted more through treatment than among those with better performance status.Several studies have related performance status to quality of life, [33][34][35][36] but only one investigated the relationship between the initial performance status and the change in quality of life, reaching a conclusion similar to ours. 37This statistically signifi cant fi nding suggests that there needs to be a change in the procedure adopted by physicians.Nowadays, such patients are usually excluded from clinical trials, but the population with a precarious performance status seems to be the one that would benefi t more from the introduction of treatment.
We found that patients given more than one type of therapy achieved better quality of life than did those given a single type.This can be easily understood if we note that in metastatic breast cancer cases, surgery and radiotherapy are usually associated with systemic treatments (chemotherapy or hormonal treatment), with the aim of immediately resolving localized intercurrences such as fl uid drainage into cavities and correction of pathological fractures, bone pains and compression phenomena that are generally accompanied by debilitating symptoms that need to be speedily palliated.Indeed, in our sample, only the patients presenting symptoms secondary to the metastatic disease were given more than one type of treatment.
Of course the major limitation of the present study was the limited number of patients enrolled and the short follow-up period.The majority of larger studies use performance status, tumor response and toxicity as surrogates for the patients' quality of life, thereby portraying a unilateral view of the events assessed. 3,21Adoption of a parameter that really evaluates the patients' perceptions in randomized studies and in clinical practice would provide a more realistic understanding of the effects of medical interventions on patients.Quality-of-life measurements have the capability to depict patients' physical, psychological and social characteristics, as an independent, fi rst-priority parameters.They make it possible to justify treatments for metastatic breast cancer cases, even if survival is not prolonged. 8As a new parameter, quality of life must be explored in order to reveal its potential as a prognostic factor and as an indicator of response to treatment, thus helping to defi ne when and how such patients should be treated.

CONCLUSIONS
Our study has shown that current oncological treatment has the potential to enhance the quality of life of metastatic breast cancer patients, provided that they present symptomatic disease, whereas there is no gain for asymptomatic patients.The poorer the patient's initial performance status, the greater will be the change in the quality of life, which therefore encourages oncological treatment for low performance status populations.Improvement in the quality of life, when found, occurs more in relation to psychosocial characteristics than to physical ones.These fi ndings need to be substantiated by other studies.
The study was conducted at the Research and Treatment Center of Hospital do Câncer, a tertiary cancer center in the city

Table 2 .
Change in quality of life on Short Form-36 questionnaire according to demographic, disease and treatment characteristics among metastatic breast cancer patients, in three different evaluations over 12 weeks (n = 40, ANOVA) ANOVA = analysis of variance; SD = standard deviation; *greater positive change in quality of life; †the worse the performance status, the greater the change in quality of life.Sao Paulo Med J. 2006;124(4):203-7.