key: cord-0756607-wbpk99yh authors: Courtney, Alona; O'Connell, Rachel; Rattay, Tim; Kim, Baek; Cutress, Ramsey I.; Kirwan, Cliona C.; Gandhi, Ashu; Fairbrother, Patricia; Sharma, Nisha; Cartlidge, Christopher W.J.; Horgan, Kieran; McIntosh, Stuart A.; Leff, Daniel R.; Vidya, Raghavan; Potter, Shelley; Holcombe, Chris; Copson, Ellen; Coles, Charlotte E.; Dave, Rajiv V. title: The B-MaP-C study: Breast cancer Management Pathways during the COVID-19 pandemic. Study protocol date: 2020-07-29 journal: Int J Surg Protoc DOI: 10.1016/j.isjp.2020.07.003 sha: eec612349a43e76df3d4b67e0adfea523ce29c0a doc_id: 756607 cord_uid: wbpk99yh INTRODUCTION: Approximately 55000 women in the United Kingdom are diagnosed with new breast cancer annually. Since emerging in December 2019, SARS-CoV-2 (coronavirus disease 2019, COVID-19) has become a global pandemic, affecting healthcare delivery worldwide. In response to the pandemic, multiple guidelines were issued to assist with rationalising breast cancer care. The primary aim of the B-MaP-C study is to audit and describe breast cancer management of patients newly diagnosed with breast cancer during the COVID-19 pandemic against pre-COVID-19 management practice in the UK. The implications of changes to management will be determined and the impact of a COVID-19 diagnosis on the patient’s breast cancer management will be determined. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This is a multi-centre collaborative audit of consecutive breast cancer patients undergoing treatment decisions during the acute and recovery phases of the COVID-19 pandemic. All patients with newly diagnosed primary breast cancer, whose treatment was decided in a multidisciplinary meeting from the 16(th) March 2020, are eligible for inclusion. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: As this is an audit ethical approval is not required. Each participating centre is required to register the study locally and obtain local governance approvals prior to commencement of data collection. Local audit data will be available to individual participating units for governance purposes. The results of the data analysis will be submitted for publication, as well as disseminated via the ABS newsletter and a webinar. All data will be presented at national and international conferences, circumstances permitting. REGISTRATION DETAILS: Each participating centre received local governance audit registration. Approximately 55000 women in the United Kingdom are diagnosed with new breast cancer annually. Since emerging in December 2019, SARS-CoV-2 (coronavirus disease 2019, has become a global pandemic, affecting healthcare delivery worldwide. In response to the pandemic, multiple guidelines were issued to assist with rationalising breast cancer care. The primary aim of the B-MaP-C study is to audit and describe breast cancer management of patients newly diagnosed with breast cancer during the COVID-19 pandemic against pre-COVID-19 management practice in the UK. The implications of changes to management will be determined and the impact of a COVID-19 diagnosis on the patient's breast cancer management will be determined. This is a multi-centre collaborative audit of consecutive breast cancer patients undergoing treatment decisions during the acute and recovery phases of the COVID-19 pandemic. All patients with newly diagnosed primary breast cancer, whose treatment was decided in a multidisciplinary meeting from the 16 th March 2020, are eligible for inclusion. As this is an audit ethical approval is not required. Each participating centre is required to register the study locally and obtain local governance approvals prior to commencement of data collection. Local audit data will be available to individual participating units for governance purposes. The results of the data analysis will be submitted for publication, as well as disseminated via the ABS newsletter and a webinar. All data will be presented at national and international conferences, circumstances permitting. Each participating centre received local governance audit registration. Approximately 55 000 women in the United Kingdom are diagnosed with new breast cancer each year [1] . Multi-modal treatment involves a combination of surgery and systemic therapy, which often involve multiple hospital visits or admissions, increasing the potential risk of exposure to COVID-19. The first case of the novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 (coronavirus disease 2019, was diagnosed in the UK on the 23 rd January 2020 [2] , with the first death recorded on the 5 th March [3, 4] . As of 5 th June 2020, COVID-19 has resulted in 6,515,796 confirmed cases and 387,298 deaths worldwide since its emergence in December 2019 [5] . Globally, the COVID-19 pandemic has led to repercussions in healthcare delivery, including alterations in cancer care. In the UK, the Association of Breast Surgery (ABS) published a guidance statement, outlining the temporary changes required to the work-up of patients with breast symptoms and the surgical management of patients with a new diagnosis of breast cancer [6] . The guidelines were intended to help breast units rationalise delivery of breast services whilst healthcare resources were limited and when hospitals were considered a high risk environment for many vulnerable patients. In summary, the ABS advised the following changes to be implemented [ should not be used to downstage from mastectomy to breast conserving surgery (BCS) or to perform axillary conservation in patients with ER-or HER2+ disease. This is to avoid a potential delay to definitive surgical treatment of the primary cancer. 3. All immediate breast reconstruction (IBR) was suspended, with delayed reconstruction to be offered at a later date once the service returned to normal to minimise surgical complexity, length of stay, complication risks, therefore reducing the risk of developing COVID-19. 4. Genomic testing on the core biopsy should be considered in all grade 3 or node positive ER+ patients [6] . Patients with a high recurrence score should be advised to have surgery as they would ordinarily need adjuvant chemotherapy. The Royal College of Radiologists (RCR) produced guidelines on the rationalisation of radiotherapy (RT) for breast cancer patients during the pandemic [7] subsequently supported by International guidelines. These were in part based on the published results of the Fast Forward trial, which demonstrated non-inferiority for local recurrence for 5 fractions of adjuvant radiotherapy compared to the UK standard of care 15 fraction [8, 9] . The guidelines recommended the following options be considered and discussed with the patient for shared decision-making: Radiotherapy omission for patients over 65 years (or younger comorbid patients) with invasive breast cancer of 30 mm or less, provided they fulfilled the following criteria: clear margins, grade (G) 1-2, ER+, HER2-and node negative commencing endocrine therapy. RT could be delivered in 5 fractions for node negative disease. Boost RT could be offered only to patients under 40 years or those over 40 with high risk of relapse. Nodal RT could be omitted in the following cases: 1) post-menopausal women undergoing whole breast RT after sentinel lymph node biopsy; 2) primary surgery for T1, ER+, HER2-G1-2 tumours with 1-2 macrometastases [7] . The guidelines also highlight that pre-operative breast radiotherapy could be used as an emergency bridging measure in patients where surgery was postponed during the COVID-19 pandemic and further pre-operative systemic therapy was not possible. These included patients with a new diagnosis of invasive breast cancer or patients completing neoadjuvant therapy, where systemic therapy was not appropriate, or patients with disease progression despite use of systemic therapies [10] . In line with the national guidelines [11] , the Cancer Core Europe (CCE) consortium published general consensus measures on the re-structuring of service delivery during the COVID-19 pandemic [12] . They recommended to record and analyse the impact of treatment alterations during the pandemic on the cancer specific patient outcomes [12] . Pardo et al. published a suggested approach to the management of breast cancer patients during different stages of the pandemic, based on their local experience [13] . Several other publications reported the outcomes of COVID-19 disease in cancer patients [14] [15] [16] , although none of these papers focused specifically on the outcomes of the breast cancer patients [17] . The primary aim of the B-MaP-C study is to audit and describe breast cancer management during the COVID-19 pandemic against standard pre-COVID-19 management practice. In addition, the impact of a COVID-19 diagnosis on the patient's breast cancer management will be determined. The short-term audit objectives are to determine the impact of the COVID-altered management on the patient outcomes, including: 1. The proportion of patients on 'bridging' neoadjuvant endocrine therapy (NET), who progress or fail to respond to this treatment, and subsequently require surgery for clinical reasons earlier than anticipated. 2. The proportion of patients, who would normally be offered IBR, undergoing simple mastectomy, who then proceed to have a delayed reconstruction, which could include mixed-methods analysis of psychological impact. The long-term aim is to audit outcomes in patients undergoing COVID-altered treatment. This national cohort of patients can be interrogated in the future for oncological outcomes, for example: 1. The impact of NET on service provision as surgery is reopened 2. The response to NET, in a cohort of patients who would ordinarily have surgery 3. Impact of COVID-altered management on local and distant recurrence This is a multi-centre collaborative study of consecutive patients with breast cancer undergoing MDT treatment decisions during the acute and recovery phases of the COVID-19 pandemic. The recruitment period is from the 16 th March 2020 (commencement of social distancing recommendations in UK) until the local recommencement of routine breast cancer management as gauged by the availability of pre-COVID services and facilities are determined. It is anticipated that most units will resume standard practice at a similar time point. This is a multi-centre collaborative audit. Collaborative study design is a well-tested method of delivery of high-quality cohort studies in the UK [14, 19, 20] with the capacity to generate meaningful large scale data with the potential to inform or change clinical practice.. There have been several successful trainee collaborative studies related to breast surgery [21] [22] [23] [24] . All eligible consecutive patients will be identified prospectively by the local participating clinical teams via the documentation from local multidisciplinary team (MDT) meetings. It is assumed that standard or COVID-altered treatment pathways for each patient will be clearly recorded in the MDT records, as per ABS guidelines. Prospective data entry is preferred, following the MDT meeting. It is accepted that in some centres, for example with a high burden of COVID-19 patients, retrospective data collection will be required. Data collection will occur in accordance with Caldicott II principles. All data will be recorded in an anonymised format using a unique alphanumeric study identification number. A secure record of NHS numbers and corresponding REDCap ID will be kept locally to facilitate 'staged' data collection and future outcome studies. No patient identifiable data will be collected or recorded centrally for the purpose of the audit. Study data will be collected and managed using REDCap™ electronic data capture tools hosted at The University of Manchester [25, 26] . REDCap™ (Research Electronic Data Capture) is a secure, web-based software platform designed to support data capture for research studies, providing 1) an intuitive interface for validated data capture; 2) audit trails for tracking data manipulation and export procedures; 3) automated export procedures for seamless data downloads to common statistical packages; and 4) procedures for data integration and interoperability with external sources [27] . Data collection will be conducted in three phases ( Figure 1 ). 1. Phase 1 will register patients to the study, document cancer TNM stage, and classify the type of treatment received (standard or COVID-altered). 2. Phase 2 will collect the details of patient demographics, imaging, staging, pathology results and the specifics of the COVID-altered treatment. 3 . Phase 3 will collect long-term treatment and outcome data for specific subsets of patients. This phase will be iteratively developed depending on the evolution of the pandemic and the subsequent data collected in phases 1 and 2. For details of the REDCap Section 1 to 5 data collection, please refer to Supplement 1 For quality assurance purposes, REDCap's built-in data quality rules will be used to find discrepancies and errors in the project data. In addition, in the lead up to publication, interim analyses will be performed to look for discrepancies in the data, and if identified, the study site will be contacted to validate that record. This is consistent with the quality assurance procedure used in other large collaborative audit projects [19] ; however, rather than selecting a random sample to validate, specific cases will be identified. The study report will be prepared according to the STROBE (Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology) reporting guidelines for observational studies [28] . All data Figure 1 . Phases of data collection analysis will occur centrally by the B-MAP-C study team with input from a biostatistician. It is anticipated that simple descriptive summary statistics will be calculated for each outcome. Data will be tested for normality and differences between groups using unpaired t-tests, Mann-Whitney U tests and Chi squared tests if appropriate. Ethical approval is not required for this cohort study as it was classified as an audit according to the NHS Health Research Authority online decision tool http://www.hradecisiontools.org.uk/research/. However, each participating centre is required to register the study locally and obtain local governance approvals prior to commencement of data collection. Data collection will be based on routine clinical data already available to local clinical teams. Collected data will be compared to established standard breast cancer management [29] as well as COVIDspecific guidelines published by the ABS [6] and the RCR [7, 10] . Local audit data will be available to individual participating centres at any given time. Participating centres will have ownership of their own data. Results of data analysis will be submitted for publication, the ABS newsletter and a webinar. All data will be presented at national and international conferences, circumstances permitting. This European study aims to describe the extent of alterations in the management of breast cancer during the COVID-19 pandemic on a patient and population-based level to help us understand the true impact of the pandemic on patient outcomes and the degree to which breast cancer management has been affected. This knowledge will assist us with the long-term planning of service delivery once routine breast cancer management resumes or if another pandemic were to occur. In addition, our findings will be helpful for long-term counselling of patients with breast cancer. Since the outcomes of our study are likely to evolve depending on the progression of the pandemic, we will discuss briefly some of the potential findings. In the UK, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines recommend that all women, undergoing a mastectomy, should be offered breast reconstruction, in view of the potential psychological effects associated with the loss of a breast [29] . However, the COVID-19 pandemic has led to suspension of IBR in many countries worldwide due to resource, workforce and safety concerns [30] . We aim to identify this cohort of women that did not have IBR as a result of the pandemic and audit patient-specific outcomes. For example, we could determine the type of reconstruction performed and the duration of waiting time against published guidelines [31] , as well as assess the impact on patients 'psychological and mental health [32, 33] . We will audit the outcomes of neoadjuvant endocrine therapy (NET) in a real-world setting. Based on the national guidelines, it is anticipated that significant number of patients with ER+HER2cancers will have their surgery deferred to minimise the risk of COVID-19 transmission as a result of hospital admission for surgery. There is evidence to suggest that NET may be utilised in postmenopausal women to facilitate breast conservation in 30-70% of women requiring mastectomy at baseline [34] [35] [36] . There is also evidence suggesting its clinical equivalence to neoadjuvant chemotherapy in post-menopausal women with ER positive disease [34] . The use of NET in premenopausal women is less well established and will be evaluated in this study. In the long term, we will have the opportunity to assess the impact of treatment alterations on the rate of disease recurrence and overall patient survival. If breast cancer outcomes following altered management are shown to be comparable to standard treatment, it may prompt future interventional trials. Finally, we anticipate that the B-MaP-C study will strengthen the collaborative breast cancer research network and will reinforce multidisciplinary links with the medical and radiation oncology research communities, allowing for better collaboration in the future. Data collection has commenced across the UK and Europe, with 59 UK units and 7 European units registered to participate to date. Interim analysis for the 'acute phase' of COVID-19 is expected to be undertaken at the end of June 2020. RVD designed the study, wrote the initial proposal, provided trainee collaborative expertise. AC inputted on the study design, drafted the manuscript based on the study proposal, and is part of the audit advisory group. ROC provided trainee collaborative expertise, advised on the study protocol, and is part of the audit advisory group. TR provided trainee collaborative expertise, advised on the study protocol, and is part of the audit advisory group. BK was involved in study design, advised on the protocol, piloted the RedCap database, and is part of the audit steering group. All authors read, commented on and approved the study design, the protocol and the final manuscript. This research did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sector. There is no conflict of interest. If bilateral or multifocal cancer, please enter data for the cancer for for which an 'altered' pathway of management was recommended (bilateral), or the largest lesion (multifocal). This will be automatically calculated using the date started NET above and and date of surgery in section 1. Was follow-up imaging performed prior to surgery (following a period of NET)? • No Was Ki67 repeated on a second core biopsy or the surgical excision specimen. What was the repeat Ki67? What was the rationale for choosing the date of surgery? • This was the planned date, when sufficient theatre capacity became available • Surgery expedited due to early availability of theatre capacity • Surgery expedited due to lack response • Surgery expedited due to intolerance of NET or compliance In patients with a pre-NET plan for mastectomy, was adequate down staging achieved to accommodate for breast conservation instead? • The Airborne Hcid, Novel coronavirus disease (Covid-19): The first two patients in the UK with person to person transmission Covid-19: UK records first death, as world's cases exceed 100 000 Woman in 70s becomes first virus fatality in UK World Health Organization, WHO Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) Dashboard Association of Breast Surgery, Statement from the association of breast surgery Guidelines on radiation therapy for breast cancer during the COVID-19 pandemic International Guidelines on Radiation Therapy for Breast Cancer During the COVID-19 Pandemic FAST-Forward): 5-year efficacy and late normal tissue effects results from a multicentre Emergency guidelines for pre-operative breast radiotherapy during the COVID-19 pandemic COVID-19 rapid guideline: delivery of systemic anticancer treatments. NICE guideline Caring for patients with cancer in the COVID-19 era Diagnosis and locoregional treatment of patients with breast cancer during the COVID-19 pandemic Elective surgery cancellations due to the COVID-19 pandemic: global predictive modelling to inform surgical recovery plans COVID-19 mortality in patients with cancer on chemotherapy or other anticancer treatments: a prospective cohort study COVID-19 in breast cancer patients: a cohort at the Institut Curie hospitals in the Paris area Rationalizing breast cancer surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic Guidelines for non-operative diagnostic procedures and reporting in breast cancer screening CholeS Study Group, Population-based cohort study of outcomes following cholecystectomy for benign gallbladder diseases Surgical trainee research collaboratives in the UK: an observational study of research activity and publication productivity The TeaM (Therapeutic Mammaplasty) study: Protocol for a prospective multi-centre cohort study to evaluate the practice and outcomes of therapeutic mammaplasty Breast Reconstruction Research, The iBRA-2 (immediate breast reconstruction and adjuvant therapy audit) study: protocol for a prospective national multicentre cohort study to evaluate the impact of immediate breast reconstruction on the delivery of adjuvant therapy The NeST (neoadjuvant systemic therapy in breast cancer) study -Protocol for a prospective multi-centre cohort study to assess the current utilization and short-term outcomes of neoadjuvant systemic therapies in breast cancer Breast Reconstruction Research, Short-term safety outcomes of mastectomy and immediate implant-based breast reconstruction with and without mesh (iBRA): a multicentre, prospective cohort study Research electronic data capture (REDCap)--a metadata-driven methodology and workflow process for providing translational research informatics support The REDCap consortium: Building an international community of software platform partners Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) statement: guidelines for reporting observational studies Early and locally advanced breast cancer: diagnosis and management (NICE Guideline NG101) Should breast reconstruction and breast oncoplastic procedures be performed during the coronavirus pandemic? British Association of Plastic Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgeons, Royal College of Nursing, The NHS Information Centre for health and social care, National Mastectomy and Breast Reconstruction Audit. A national audit of provision and outcomes of mastectomy and breast reconstruction surgery for women in England Second Annual Report Comparison of psychological aspects and patient satisfaction following breast conserving surgery, simple mastectomy and breast reconstruction Satisfaction with and psychological impact of immediate and deferred breast reconstruction Neoadjuvant treatment of postmenopausal breast cancer with anastrozole, tamoxifen, or both in combination: the Immediate Preoperative Anastrozole, Tamoxifen, or Combined with Tamoxifen (IMPACT) multicenter double-blind randomized trial Comparison of anastrozole versus tamoxifen as preoperative therapy in postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive breast cancer: the Pre-Operative "Arimidex" Compared to Tamoxifen (PROACT) trial Ki67 index changes, pathological response and clinical benefits in primary breast cancer patients treated with 24 weeks of aromatase inhibition