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Featured researches published by J.E.A. Portielje.


Journal of Geriatric Oncology | 2013

Frailty and malnutrition predictive of mortality risk in older patients with advanced colorectal cancer receiving chemotherapy.

Ab A. Aaldriks; Lydia van der Geest; Erik J. Giltay; Saskia le Cessie; J.E.A. Portielje; Bea Tanis; Johan W.R. Nortier; E. Maartense

INTRODUCTION In general, geriatric assessment (GA) provides the combined information on comorbidity and functional, nutritional and psychosocial status and may be predictive for mortality outcome of cancer patients. The impact of geriatric assessment on the outcome of older patients with colorectal cancer treated with chemotherapy is largely unknown. METHODS In a prospective study, 143 patients with colorectal cancer who were 70years and older were assessed before chemotherapy by Mini Nutritional Assessment (MNA), Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly (IQCODE), Groningen Frailty Indicator (GFI) and Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE). RESULTS Fifty-four (38%) patients received adjuvant chemotherapy and 89 (62%) patients received palliative chemotherapy. Malnutrition and frailty were prevalent in 39 (27%, assessed by MNA) and 34 (24%, by GFI) patients, respectively; whereas cognitive impairment was prevalent in 19 (13%, by IQCODE) and 11 (8%, by MMSE) patients, respectively. In patients with palliative chemotherapy, poor MNA scores were associated with receiving less than 4cycles of chemotherapy (p=0.008). Poor MNA and GFI scores were associated with increased hazard ratios (HR) for mortality for patients with palliative chemotherapy: HR=2.76 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.60-4.77; p<0.001) and HR=2.72 (95% CI: 1.58-4.69; p<0.001), respectively, after adjustment for several clinical parameters. CONCLUSIONS Malnutrition and frailty were strongly associated with an increased mortality risk in patients who underwent palliative chemotherapy. Furthermore, a poor score on MNA was predictive for less tolerance of chemotherapy. Our findings may help the oncologist in future decision making and advice for elderly patients with colorectal cancer.


Oncologist | 2011

Lack of Survival Gain for Elderly Women with Breast Cancer

E. Bastiaannet; J.E.A. Portielje; Cornelis J. H. van de Velde; Anton J. M. de Craen; Susanne van der Velde; Peter J. K. Kuppen; Lydia van der Geest; Maryska L.G. Janssen-Heijnen; Olaf M. Dekkers; Rudi G. J. Westendorp; Gerrit-Jan Liefers

BACKGROUND The number of elderly women with breast cancer is increasing and will become a major health concern. However, little is known about the optimal treatment for this age group. The aim of this study was to describe time trends for the overall Dutch breast cancer cohort with an emphasis on differences between young and elderly patients. METHODS All adult female patients diagnosed in 1995-2005 were selected from the Netherlands Cancer Registry. Relative excess risks for death (adjusted for stage, histology, treatment, and grade) were estimated using a multivariate generalized linear model with a Poisson distribution, based on collapsed relative survival data, using exact survival times. RESULTS Overall, 127,805 patients were included. Treatment of patients aged ≥75 years changed significantly over time: they received less surgery, more adjuvant hormonal treatment and chemotherapy, and more hormonal treatment without surgery. In contrast to younger patients, the relative survival did not improve significantly over time for elderly patients. With increasing age, the observed-expected death ratio decreased to almost 1.0. CONCLUSION Survival for elderly patients with breast cancer did not improve significantly. Observed-expected death ratios in the elderly are close to 1, indicating that excess mortality is low. Elderly patients with breast cancer have a higher risk for overtreatment and undertreatment, with a delicate therapeutic balance between breast cancer survival gain and potential toxicities. To improve breast cancer survival in the elderly, a critical reappraisal is needed of costs and benefits of hormonal as well as other treatments, and better selection of patients who can benefit from available therapies is warranted.


Clinical Breast Cancer | 2011

Randomized phase II study comparing efficacy and safety of combination-therapy trastuzumab and docetaxel vs. sequential therapy of trastuzumab followed by docetaxel alone at progression as first-line chemotherapy in patients with HER2+ metastatic breast cancer: HERTAX trial.

Paul Hamberg; Monique M.E.M. Bos; Hans J Braun; Jacqueline Stouthard; Gert van Deijk; Frans Erdkamp; Iris N. van der Stelt-Frissen; M. Bontenbal; Geert-Jan Creemers; J.E.A. Portielje; J.F.M. Pruijt; Olaf Loosveld; Willem M. Smit; Erik W. Muller; P.I.M. Schmitz; Caroline Seynaeve; J.G.M. Klijn

BACKGROUND Because chemotherapy for metastatic breast cancer (MBC) is associated with relevant toxicity, sequential monotherapy trastuzumab followed by cytotoxic therapy at disease progression might be an attractive approach. METHODS In a multicenter phase II trial, 101 patients with overexpression of human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2(+)) MBC were randomized between combination-therapy trastuzumab (Herceptin) plus docetaxel (H+D) and sequential therapy of single-agent trastuzumab followed at disease progression by docetaxel alone (H→D) as first-line chemotherapy for metastatic disease. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival (PFS) after completed sequential or combination therapy. RESULTS For the H+D group the median PFS was 9.4 vs. 9.9 months for the H→D group and 1-year PFS rates were 44% vs. 35%, respectively. However the overall response rates (ORRs) were 79% vs. 53%, respectively (P = .016), and overall survival was 30.5 vs. 19.7 months, respectively (P = .11). In the H→D group, response rates to monotherapy trastuzumab and subsequent docetaxel were 34% and 39%, respectively, with a median PFS during single-agent trastuzumab of 3.9 months. The incidence and severity of neuropathy were significantly higher in the H+D group. Retrospective analysis of trastuzumab treatment beyond progression (applied in 46% of patients in the H+D group and 37% in the H→D group) showed a correlation with longer overall survival in both treatment arms (36.0 vs. 18.0 months and 30.3 vs. 18.6 months, respectively). CONCLUSION First-line treatment in patients with MBC with H→D resulted in a similar PFS compared with H+D, but the response rate was lower and the overall survival nonsignificantly shorter.


The Breast | 2013

Prognostic value of geriatric assessment in older patients with advanced breast cancer receiving chemotherapy

Ab A. Aaldriks; Erik J. Giltay; S. le Cessie; L.G.M. van der Geest; J.E.A. Portielje; Bea Tanis; Johan W.R. Nortier; E. Maartense

INTRODUCTION The prognostic value of geriatric assessment in older patients with breast cancer treated with chemotherapy is largely unknown. METHODS Fifty-five patients with advanced breast cancer aged 70 years or older were assessed by Mini Nutritional Assessment (MNA), Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly (IQCODE), Groningen Frailty Indicator (GFI) and Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE). Levels of albumin, hemoglobin, creatinine and lactate dehydrogenase were measured. Patients completing at least four cycles of chemotherapy were reassessed by GFI and MMSE and mortality was evaluated using Cox regression analysis. RESULTS The mean age was 76 year (SD 4.8). Inferior MNA and GFI scores were associated with increased hazard ratios for mortality: 3.05 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.44-6.45; p = 0.004) and 3.40 (95% CI: 1.62-7.10; p = 0.001), respectively. Physical aspects of frailty worsened during the course of chemotherapy. Laboratory values were not associated with assessment scores nor were they predictive for mortality. CONCLUSIONS Malnutrition and frailty, rather than cognitive impairment and laboratory values, were associated with an increased mortality risk in these elderly breast cancer patients with advanced breast cancer.


Annals of Oncology | 2013

Diabetes in relation to breast cancer relapse and all-cause mortality in elderly breast cancer patients: a FOCUS study analysis

M. Kiderlen; N.A. de Glas; E. Bastiaannet; Charla C. Engels; W. van de Water; A.J.M. de Craen; J.E.A. Portielje; C.J.H. van de Velde; G.J. Liefers

BACKGROUND In developed countries, 40% of breast cancer patients are >65 years of age at diagnosis, of whom 16% additionally suffer from diabetes. The aim of this study was to assess the impact of diabetes on relapse-free period (RFP) and overall mortality in elderly breast cancer patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients were selected from the retrospective FOCUS cohort, which contains detailed information of elderly breast cancer patients. RFP was calculated using Fine and Gray competing risk regression models for patients with diabetes versus patients without diabetes. Overall survival was calculated by Cox regression models, in which patients were divided into four groups: no comorbidity, diabetes only, diabetes and other comorbidity or other comorbidity without diabetes. RESULTS Overall, 3124 patients with non-metastasized breast cancer were included. RFP was better for patients with diabetes compared with patients without diabetes (multivariable HR 0.77, 95% CI 0.59-1.01), irrespective of other comorbidity and most evident in patients aged ≥75 years (HR 0.67, 95% CI 0.45-0.98). The overall survival was similar for patients with diabetes only compared with patients without comorbidity (HR 0.86, 95% CI 0.45-0.98), while patients with diabetes and additional comorbidity had the worst overall survival (HR 1.70, 95% CI 1.44-2.01). CONCLUSION When taking competing mortality into account, RFP was better in elderly breast cancer patients with diabetes compared with patients without diabetes. Moreover, patients with diabetes without other comorbidity had a similar overall survival as patients without any comorbidity. Possibly, unfavourable effects of (complications of) diabetes on overall survival are counterbalanced by beneficial effects of metformin on the occurrence of breast cancer recurrences.


Cancer Treatment Reviews | 2013

Age and the effect of physical activity on breast cancer survival: A systematic review

D.B.Y. Fontein; N.A. de Glas; M. Duijm; E. Bastiaannet; J.E.A. Portielje; C.J.H. van de Velde; G.J. Liefers

The effect of physical activity (PA) on cancer survival is still the topic of debate in oncology research focusing on survivorship, and has been investigated retrospectively in several large clinical trials. PA has been shown to improve quality of life, fitness and strength, and to reduce depression and fatigue. At present, there is a growing body of evidence on the effects of PA interventions for cancer survivors on health outcomes. PA and functional limitations are interrelated in the elderly. However the relationship between breast cancer survival and PA in older breast cancer patients has not yet been fully investigated. Our systematic review of the existing literature on this topic yielded seventeen studies. Most reports demonstrated an improved overall and breast cancer-specific survival. Furthermore, in studies that compared younger women with older or postmenopausal women, it was suggested that the beneficial effect of PA may be even greater in older women. Understanding the interaction between physical functioning and cancer survival in older breast cancer patients is key, and may contribute to successful treatment and survival. In this population of cancer survivors it is therefore imperative to embark on research focused on improving physical functioning in the context of comorbidities and functional limitations.


Acta Oncologica | 2016

Deciding about (neo-)adjuvant rectal and breast cancer treatment: Missed opportunities for shared decision making

Marleen Kunneman; Ellen G. Engelhardt; Ten Hove Fl; Corrie A.M. Marijnen; J.E.A. Portielje; Ellen M. A. Smets; de Haes Hj; Anne M. Stiggelbout; Arwen H. Pieterse

Background. The first step in shared decision making (SDM) is creating choice awareness. This is particularly relevant in consultations concerning preference-sensitive treatment decisions, e.g. those addressing (neo-)adjuvant therapy. Awareness can be achieved by explicitly stating, as the ‘reason for encounter’, that a treatment decision needs to be made. It is unknown whether oncologists express such reason for encounter. This study aims to establish: 1) if ‘making a treatment decision’ is stated as a reason for the encounter and if not, what other reason for encounter is provided; and 2) whether mentioning that a treatment decision needs to be made is associated with enhanced patient involvement in decision making. Material and methods. Consecutive first consultations with: 1) radiation oncologists and rectal cancer patients; or 2) medical oncologists and breast cancer patients, facing a preference-sensitive treatment decision, were audiotaped. The tapes were transcribed and coded using an instrument developed for the study. Oncologists’ involvement of patients in decision making was coded using the OPTION-scale. Results. Oncologists (N = 33) gave a reason for encounter in 70/100 consultations, usually (N = 52/70, 74%) at the start of the consultation. The reason for encounter stated was ‘making a treatment decision’ in 3/100 consultations, and ‘explaining treatment details’ in 44/100 consultations. The option of foregoing adjuvant treatment was not explicitly presented in any consultation. Oncologist’ involvement of patients in decision making was below baseline (Md OPTION-score = 10). Given the small number of consultations in which the need to make a treatment decision was stated, we could not investigate the impact thereof on patient involvement. Conclusion. This study suggests that oncologists rarely express that a treatment decision needs to be made in consultations concerning preference-sensitive treatment decisions. Therefore, patients might not realize that foregoing (neo-)adjuvant treatment is a viable choice. Oncologists miss a crucial opportunity to facilitate SDM.


BMJ | 2014

Effect of implementation of the mass breast cancer screening programme in older women in the Netherlands : population based study

Nienke A. de Glas; Anton J. M. de Craen; E. Bastiaannet; Ester G Op 't Land; Mandy Kiderlen; Willemien van de Water; Sabine Siesling; J.E.A. Portielje; Herman M Schuttevaer; Geertruida H. de Bock; Cornelis J. H. van de Velde; Gerrit-Jan Liefers

Objective To assess the incidence of early stage and advanced stage breast cancer before and after the implementation of mass screening in women aged 70-75 years in the Netherlands in 1998. Design Prospective nationwide population based study. Setting National cancer registry, the Netherlands. Participants Patients aged 70-75 years with a diagnosis of invasive or ductal carcinoma in situ breast cancer between 1995 and 2011 (n=25 414). Incidence rates were calculated using population data from Statistics Netherlands. Main outcome measure Incidence rates of early stage (I, II, or ductal carcinoma in situ) and advanced stage (III and IV) breast cancer before and after implementation of screening. Hypotheses were formulated before data collection. Results The incidence of early stage tumours significantly increased after the extension for implementation of screening (248.7 cases per 100 000 women before screening up to 362.9 cases per 100 000 women after implementation of screening, incidence rate ratio 1.46, 95% confidence interval 1.40 to 1.52, P<0.001). However, the incidence of advanced stage breast cancers decreased to a far lesser extent (58.6 cases per 100 000 women before screening to 51.8 cases per 100 000 women after implementation of screening, incidence rate ratio 0.88, 0.81 to 0.97, P<0.001). Conclusions The extension of the upper age limit to 75 years has only led to a small decrease in incidence of advanced stage breast cancer, while that of early stage tumours has strongly increased.


Colorectal Disease | 2013

Complicated postoperative recovery increases omission, delay and discontinuation of adjuvant chemotherapy in patients with Stage III colon cancer

L. G. M. Geest; J.E.A. Portielje; Michel W.J.M. Wouters; N. I. Weijl; B. C. Tanis; R.A.E.M. Tollenaar; H. Struikmans; Nortier Jw

The study included investigation of factors determining suboptimal adjuvant chemotherapy of patients diagnosed with Stage III colon cancer.


European Journal of Cancer | 2013

Omission of surgery in elderly patients with early stage breast cancer

Marije E. Hamaker; E. Bastiaannet; Dorothea Evers; Willemien van de Water; Carolien H. Smorenburg; E. Maartense; Anneke M. Zeilemaker; Gerrit-Jan Liefers; Lydia van der Geest; Sophia E. de Rooij; Barbara C. van Munster; J.E.A. Portielje

AIM To assess national trends over time in surgery for elderly patients with resectable breast cancer (BC) and to evaluate clinical outcome and cause of death after the omission of surgery in a regional cohort of elderly patients. METHODS National trends in 1995-2005 were calculated using cancer registry data. In addition, a chart review was performed in a cohort of patients aged ≥ 75 years, with early stage BC but no primary surgery, diagnosed at five Dutch hospitals in 1990-2005. Patient characteristics, comorbidity and reason for the omission of surgery were collected from the chart. Cause of death was retrieved from death certificate data registered at Statistics Netherlands. RESULTS Omission of surgery increased significantly over time for patients aged 80 years and older (p<0.05). Of the 187 patients in the regional cohort (median age 85.9 years (range 75.0-97.7), 174 (92%) received hormonal therapy. Omission of surgery was at the patients request in 59 patients (32%). Of the 178 patients that died during follow-up, 60 patients (34%) died of BC. For 81 patients (45%), BC was not clinically relevant at the time of death. Median overall survival was 2.3 years (range 0.2-10.7) and did not differ between BC and other causes of death (p=0.9). CONCLUSION Omission of surgery for elderly patients with resectable BC has increased significantly over the past decade; instead patients often received primary endocrine treatment. Although this may appear an effective alternative to surgery, the potential for a longer term negative impact on disease control and quality of life deserves further investigation.

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E. Bastiaannet

Leiden University Medical Center

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C.J.H. van de Velde

Leiden University Medical Center

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G.J. Liefers

Leiden University Medical Center

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A.J.M. de Craen

Leiden University Medical Center

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N.A. de Glas

Leiden University Medical Center

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Gerrit-Jan Liefers

Leiden University Medical Center

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Judith R. Kroep

Leiden University Medical Center

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M. Kiderlen

Leiden University Medical Center

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