학술논문

The association between glucose-lowering drug use and mortality among breast cancer patients with type 2 diabetes
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Breast Cancer Research and Treatment. April, 2015, Vol. 150 Issue 2, p427, 11 p.
Subject
Mortality -- Analysis
Glucose -- Analysis
Type 2 diabetes -- Development and progression -- Patient outcomes -- Analysis
Diabetes therapy -- Analysis
Cancer patients -- Patient outcomes -- Analysis
Breast cancer -- Development and progression -- Patient outcomes -- Analysis
Diabetics -- Patient outcomes -- Analysis
Language
English
ISSN
0167-6806
Abstract
This study assessed the association between glucose-lowering drug (GLD) use, including metformin, sulphonylurea derivatives and insulin, after breast cancer diagnosis and breast cancer-specific and all-cause mortality. 1763 breast cancer patients, diagnosed between 1998 and 2010, with type 2 diabetes were included. Cancer information was retrieved from English cancer registries, prescription data from the UK Clinical Practice Research Datalink and mortality data from the Office of National Statistics (up to January 2012). Time-varying Cox regression models were used to calculate HRs and 95 % CIs for the association between GLD use and breast cancer-specific and all-cause mortality. In 1057 patients with diabetes before breast cancer, there was some evidence that breast cancer-specific mortality decreased with each year of metformin use (adjusted HR 0.88; 95 % CI 0.75-1.04), with a strong association seen with over 2 years of use (adjusted HR 0.47; 95 % CI 0.26-0.82). Sulphonylurea derivative use for less than 2 years was associated with increased breast cancer-specific mortality (adjusted HR 1.70; 95 % CI 1.18-2.46), but longer use was not (adjusted HR 0.94; 95 % CI 0.54-1.66). In 706 patients who developed diabetes after breast cancer, similar patterns were seen for metformin, but sulphonylurea derivative use was strongly associated with cancer-specific mortality (adjusted HR 3.64; 95 % CI 2.16-6.16), with similar estimates for short- and long-term users. This study provides some support for an inverse association between, mainly long-term, metformin use and (breast cancer-specific) mortality. In addition, sulphonylurea derivative use was associated with increased breast cancer-specific mortality, but this should be interpreted cautiously, as it could reflect selective prescribing in advanced cancer patients.
Author(s): Pauline A. J. Vissers[sup.1] [sup.2] , Chris R. Cardwell[sup.3] , Lonneke V. van de Poll-Franse[sup.1] [sup.2] , Ian S. Young[sup.3] , Frans Pouwer[sup.1] , Liam J. Murray[sup.3] Author Affiliations: [...]