Abstract

Abstract Funding Source: Institutional funds at Mayo Clinic. Background: While alopecia is a common and distressing acute side effect of chemotherapy, chronic hair thinning is also reported by some survivors during endocrine therapy. The purpose of the current study was to evaluate real world experiences of late/long-term alopecia among breast cancer survivors. Methods: Breast cancer survivors participating in the ongoing prospective Mayo Clinic Breast Disease Registry (MCBDR) were mailed a survey six years after diagnosis, between June and November 2020. Respondents were asked to report how bothered they are by hair thinning and hair loss over the last year on a scale from 0 “not at all” to 4 “extremely”. They were also asked whether they used any hair thickening or regrowth products. Results: 552/899 survivors responded (response rate 61%); 403 survivors’ responses were available for analysis. Respondents’ median age was 66 years, and median time since diagnosis was 78 months. Seventy patients (17%) were diagnosed with stage 0 breast cancer, 195 (48%) were diagnosed with stage 1 cancer, 104 (26%) with stage 2, 25 (6%) with stage 3; 6 (1%) had been diagnosed with metastatic or recurrent disease at the time of this survey. 139 (34%) patients had received chemotherapy. Of the patients who received chemotherapy, 82 (59%) had received doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide, 41 (29%) received docetaxel and cyclophosphamide, 77 (55%) received paclitaxel, and 27 (19%) received carboplatin. 258 (64%) received endocrine therapy. Of these patients who received endocrine therapy, 131 (51%) received Tamoxifen and 186 (72%) received aromatase inhibitors. 309 survivors (77%) were 55 years or older. 189 (47%) of all patients reported that they were bothered by chronic hair loss, and 225 (56%) reported that they were bothered by hair thinning; 71 (18%) reported use of thickening/regrowth products. There did not appear to be differences in chronic hair loss or thinning by receipt of chemotherapy: 64 patients (46%) who received chemotherapy reported hair loss and 79 (56%) reported hair thinning, compared with 123 patients (46%) who did not receive chemotherapy and reported hair loss and 142 (54%) who reported hair thinning. Hair thinning or loss did not appear to differ based upon age (Table 1). Symptoms did not appear to be more common amongst current or previous endocrine therapy recipients, with 113 (44%) of that subset bothered by hair loss and 128 (50%) by hair thinning. Conclusion: Hair loss and thinning are frequently reported as bothersome symptoms by long-term breast cancer survivors. Future investigations into treatments for chronic hair thinning during and after cancer therapy are needed. Table 1.< 5555+Bothered by hair loss (n)%Bothered by hair thinning (n)%Bothered by hair loss (n)%Bothered by hair thinning (n)%Not at all5761%4649%15751%13142%Slightly1920%2426%8728%9731%Moderately77%910%3110%4113%BOTHERED BY HAIR LOSS (N)%BOTHERED BY HAIR THINNING (N)%BOTHERED BY HAIR LOSS (N)%BOTHERED BY HAIR THINNING (N)%Quite a bit77%1112%227%268%Extremely44%33%93%103%Missing00%11%31%41% Citation Format: Elizabeth Cathcart-Rake, Charles L Loprinzi, Janet E Olson, Fergus Couch, Brittany Dulmage, Maryam Lustberg, Nicole Larson, Kathryn J Ruddy. Alopecia among breast cancer survivors [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 2021 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium; 2021 Dec 7-10; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2022;82(4 Suppl):Abstract nr P4-10-17.

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