Health Care Utilization and Follow-Up Care in Young Adult Breast Cancer Survivors.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
PURPOSE: Given the extended survivorship of young adults with breast cancer, characterizing health care utilization and adherence to surveillance guidelines can inform gaps in care. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Patients age 40 years and younger at diagnosis of stage 0-III breast cancer enrolled in a prospective cohort study completed a survey 7 years after diagnosis assessing receipt of care and surveillance. We evaluated factors associated with transition to a primary care provider (PCP) for cancer-related follow-up and adherence to mammography and bone density scans. RESULTS: Among 660 women, 92% reported having a PCP, although for cancer-related follow-up, 57% saw only an oncology provider, 29% saw both a PCP and oncology provider. In the past 2 years, 68% reported getting a flu shot, 76% a pap test/pelvic examination, 56% cholesterol screening, and 42% (n = 232 endocrine therapy [ET] users) a bone density scan. Among women who had a unilateral mastectomy or lumpectomy (n = 356), 82% reported a mammogram in the past year. In multivariate analyses, those with stage 0 (v I disease) were more likely to see a PCP for follow-up (v PCP + oncology provider); ET users and those more concerned about recurrence were less likely. Patients with human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-positive (HER2) disease were more likely to adhere to mammography; those with a BRCA mutation and those with a unilateral mastectomy were less likely. Patients with a BRCA mutation and who had chemotherapy were more likely to report a bone density scan. CONCLUSION: Although most have a PCP, over half of young survivors continue to see an oncology provider for follow-up in long-term survivorship. Mammography uptake was high; uptake of other health maintenance practices was lower. Identification of barriers/facilitators to receipt of guideline-concordant care may inform strategies to optimize survivorship.