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Dive into the research topics where Suzanne B. Evans is active.

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Featured researches published by Suzanne B. Evans.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2014

Adoption of hypofractionated whole-breast irradiation for early-stage breast cancer: a National Cancer Data Base analysis.

Elyn H. Wang; Sarah Schellhorn Mougalian; Pamela R. Soulos; C.E. Rutter; Suzanne B. Evans; Bruce G. Haffty; Cary P. Gross; James B. Yu

PURPOSE To evaluate the relationship of patient, hospital, and cancer characteristics with the adoption of hypofractionation in a national sample of patients diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer. METHODS AND MATERIALS We performed a retrospective study of breast cancer patients in the National Cancer Data Base from 2004-2011 who were treated with radiation therapy and met eligibility criteria for hypofractionation. We used logistic regression to identify factors associated with receipt of hypofractionation (vs conventional fractionation). RESULTS We identified 13,271 women (11.7%) and 99,996 women (88.3%) with early-stage breast cancer who were treated with hypofractionation and conventional fractionation, respectively. The use of hypofractionation increased significantly, with 5.4% of patients receiving it in 2004 compared with 22.8% in 2011 (P<.001 for trend). Patients living ≥50 miles from the cancer reporting facility had increased odds of receiving hypofractionation (odds ratio 1.57 [95% confidence interval 1.44-1.72], P<.001). Adoption of hypofractionation was associated with treatment at an academic center (P<.001) and living in an area with high median income (P<.001). Hypofractionation was less likely to be used in patients with high-risk disease, such as increased tumor size (P<.001) or poorly differentiated histologic grade (P<.001). CONCLUSIONS The use of hypofractionation is rising and is associated with increased travel distance and treatment at an academic center. Further adoption of hypofractionation may be tempered by both clinical and nonclinical concerns.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2014

Breast cancer laterality does not influence survival in a large modern cohort: implications for radiation-related cardiac mortality.

C.E. Rutter; Anees B. Chagpar; Suzanne B. Evans

OBJECTIVES Radiation therapy for left-sided breast cancer has been associated with an elevated risk of cardiac mortality, based on studies predating treatment planning based on computed tomography. This study assessed the impact of tumor laterality on overall survival (OS) in a large cohort treated with modern techniques, to indirectly determine whether left-sided treatment remains associated with increased cardiac mortality. METHODS AND MATERIALS Patients treated for breast cancer with breast conserving surgery and adjuvant external beam radiation therapy were identified in the National Cancer Database, and OS was compared based on tumor laterality using Kaplan-Meier analysis. Separate analyses were performed for noninvasive and invasive carcinoma and for breast-only and breast plus regional nodal radiation therapy. Multivariate regression analysis of OS was performed with demographic, pathologic, and treatment variables as covariates to adjust for factors associated with breast cancer-specific survival. RESULTS We identified 344,831 patients whose cancer was diagnosed from 1998 to 2006 with a median follow-up time of 6.04 years (range, 0-14.17 years). Clinical, tumor, and treatment characteristics were similar between laterality groups. Regional nodal radiation was used in 14.2% of invasive cancers. No OS difference was noted based on tumor laterality for patients treated with breast-only (hazard ratio [HR] 0.984, P=.132) and breast plus regional nodal radiation therapy (HR 1.001, P=.957). In multivariate analysis including potential confounders, OS was identical between left and right sided cancers (HR 1.002, P=.874). No significant OS difference by laterality was observed when analyses were restricted to patients with at least 10 years of follow-up (n=27,725), both in patients treated with breast-only (HR 0.955, P=.368) and breast plus regional nodal radiation therapy (HR 0.859, P=.155). CONCLUSIONS Radiation therapy for left-sided breast cancer does not appear to increase the risk of death in this national database relative to right-sided tumors. Consequently, radiation therapy-induced cardiac disease may be less prominent than previously demonstrated.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2014

Examining the Cost-Effectiveness of Radiation Therapy Among Older Women With Favorable-Risk Breast Cancer

Sounok Sen; Shi-Yi Wang; Pamela R. Soulos; Kevin D. Frick; Jessica B. Long; Kenneth B. Roberts; James B. Yu; Suzanne B. Evans; Anees B. Chagpar; Cary P. Gross

BACKGROUND Little is known about the cost-effectiveness of external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) or newer radiation therapy (RT) modalities such as intensity modulated radiation (IMRT) or brachytherapy among older women with favorable-risk breast cancer. METHODS Using a Markov model, we estimated the cost-effectiveness of no RT, EBRT, and IMRT over 10 years. We estimated the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of IMRT compared with EBRT under different scenarios to determine the necessary improvement in effectiveness for newer modalities to be cost-effective. We estimated model inputs using women in the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results-Medicare database fulfilling the Cancer and Leukemia Group B C9343 trial criteria. RESULTS The incremental cost of EBRT compared with no RT was


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2016

Preoperative Breast Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Contralateral Breast Cancer Occurrence Among Older Women With Breast Cancer

Shi-Yi Wang; Jessica B. Long; Brigid K. Killelea; Suzanne B. Evans; Kenneth B. Roberts; Andrea Silber; Cary P. Gross

9500 with an ICER of


Seminars in Radiation Oncology | 2016

Contemporary Breast Radiotherapy and Cardiac Toxicity

D.N. Yeboa; Suzanne B. Evans

44600 per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) gained. The ICERs increased with age, ranging from


Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics | 2015

Medical Physics Practice Guideline 4.a: Development, implementation, use and maintenance of safety checklists

E. Fong de los Santos; Suzanne B. Evans; Eric C. Ford; James E. Gaiser; Sandra E. Hayden; Kristina E. Huffman; Jennifer L. Johnson; James Mechalakos; Robin L. Stern; Stephanie A. Terezakis; Bruce R. Thomadsen; Peter J. Pronovost; Lynne A. Fairobent

38300 (age 70-74 years) to


Cancer | 2015

The evolving role of adjuvant radiotherapy for elderly women with early-stage breast cancer

C.E. Rutter; N.H. Lester-Coll; B.R. Mancini; Christopher D. Corso; Henry S. Park; D.N. Yeboa; Cary P. Gross; Suzanne B. Evans

55800 (age 80 to 94 years) per QALY. The ICERs increased to more than


American Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2012

Prevalence of poor cardiac anatomy in carcinoma of the breast treated with whole-breast radiotherapy: reconciling modern cardiac dosimetry with cardiac mortality data

Suzanne B. Evans; Shirin Sioshansi; Meena S. Moran; Jessica R. Hiatt; Lori Lyn Price; David E. Wazer

63800 per QALY for women aged 70 to 74 years with an expected 10-year survival of 25%. Reduction in local recurrence by IMRT compared with EBRT did not have a substantial impact on the ICER of IMRT. IMRT would have to increase the utility of baseline state by 20% to be cost-effective (<


Practical radiation oncology | 2013

Analysis of coronary artery dosimetry in the 3-dimensional era: Implications for organ-at-risk segmentation and dose tolerances in left-sided tangential breast radiation

Suzanne B. Evans; Babita Panigrahi; Veronika Northrup; Joseph T. Patterson; Drew E. Baldwin; Susan A. Higgins; Meena S. Moran

100000 per QALY). CONCLUSIONS EBRT is cost-effective for older women with favorable risk breast cancer, but substantially less cost-effective for women with shorter expected survival. Newer RT modalities would have to be substantially more effective than existing therapies in improving quality of life to be cost-effective.


American Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2008

Management of the axilla after the finding of a positive sentinel lymph node: a proposal for an evidence-based risk-adapted algorithm.

Suzanne B. Evans; Jennifer S. Gass; David E. Wazer

PURPOSE Preoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) detects occult contralateral breast cancers (CBCs) in women with breast cancer, but the impact of detection on long-term CBC events is unclear. We examined whether MRI use decreases the occurrence of CBCs and the detection of stages II to IV disease among women who develop a CBC. PATIENTS AND METHODS Analyzing the SEER-Medicare database, we assessed overall, synchronous (< 6 months after primary cancer diagnosis), and subsequent (ie, metachronous) stage-specific CBC occurrences in women who were diagnosed with stages I and II breast cancer during 2004-2009 and who were observed through 2011. RESULTS Among 38,971 women with breast cancer, 6,377 (16.4%) received preoperative MRI. After propensity score matching, and compared with women who did not undergo MRI, preoperative MRI use was significantly associated with a higher synchronous CBC detection rate (126.4 v 42.9 per 1,000 person-years, respectively; hazard ratio, 2.85; P < .001) but a lower subsequent CBC detection rate (3.3 v 4.5 per 1,000 person-years, respectively; hazard ratio, 0.68; P = .002). However, the 5-year cumulative incidence of CBC remained significantly higher among women undergoing MRI compared with those not undergoing MRI (7.2% v 4.0%, respectively; P < .001). The analyses of projected CBC events for 10,000 patients who receive MRI indicated that, after a 5-year follow-up, MRI use would detect an additional 192 in situ CBCs (95% CI, 125 to 279) and 120 stage I CBCs (95% CI, 62 to 193) but would not have a significant impact on stages II to IV CBC occurrences (∼ 6; 95% CI, -21 to 47). CONCLUSION An increased synchronous CBC detection rate, attributable to MRI, was not offset by a decrease of subsequent CBC occurrence among older women with early-stage breast cancer, suggesting that preoperative MRI in women with breast cancer may lead to overdiagnosis.

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