Abstract

363 Background: The incidence of BC in young adults is increasing; given their extended survivorship, characterizing healthcare utilization and adherence to surveillance guidelines can inform unmet health needs and gaps in care. Methods: The multi-center Young Women’s BC Cohort Study enrolled 1302 women ≤40 yrs with newly diagnosed (dx) BC from 2006-2016. Participants completed surveys every 6 mos for 3 yrs post-dx, then annually. The current analysis includes patients with Stage 0-III BC without recurrence who completed the 7-yr survey assessing survivorship care, including types of providers visited, BC surveillance, and other health maintenance practices. Multivariate logistic regression evaluated factors (clinical, demographics, concern about recurrence) associated with 1) full transition to a primary care provider (PCP) for follow-up; adherence to 2) mammography (among women who had a unilateral mastectomy or lumpectomy) and 3) bone density scans (among current hormonal therapy [HT] users), per ASCO/ACS guidelines. Results: Of 660 women with Stage 0-III BC, median age at dx was 37 (range: 17-40); 89% identified as White, 5%, Asian, 3%, Black, 3% as other/multiracial, and 4%, Hispanic. Most had received chemotherapy (75%) and radiation (61%) and 35% reported current HT; 12% had a BRCA1/2 mutation. For cancer-related follow-up, 57% reported seeing an oncology provider only, 12%, PCP only, and 29% saw a PCP + oncology provider. Among women with remaining breast(s) (n=348), 90% reported a mammogram in the last year. Adherence to other health maintenance practices varied: 68% reported having had a flu shot, 76% a pap test/pelvic exam, and 56% cholesterol screening within the last 2 yrs. Among current HT users (n=210), 46% reported a bone density scan within the last 2 yrs. In multivariate analyses assessing the odds of seeing a PCP only (vs. oncology + PCP), having stage 0 vs I disease (OR 2.74 95% CI 1.01-6.80) was associated with higher odds while any HT use (OR .31 95% CI .16-.58) and concern about recurrence (OR .23 95% CI .12-.47) were associated with lower odds. The table includes factors significantly associated with non-adherence to mammography and bone density scans. Conclusions: At 7-years post-dx, most young survivors participating in a cohort study receive cancer follow-up care from an oncology provider and have not fully transitioned their care to a PCP. Adherence to recommendations related to bone health among HT users was suboptimal. Additional research to identify barriers/facilitators to receipt of guideline-concordant follow-up care at the patient, provider, and systems levels may inform strategies to optimize survivorship in young BC survivors. Multivariable analysis: factors associated with non-adherence. MammogramOR 95% CI Bone density scanOR 95% CI Her2+ .38, .15 -.98 NS BRCA1/2 + 8.36, 1.38-50.47 .17, .05 -.62 Chemotherapy NS .22, .06 -.78 Unilateral mastectomy vs lumpectomy 6.64, 2.69-16.34 NS

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