
Mobile Health Intervention Ups QOL in AYA Breast Cancer Survivors
A mobile health intervention was linked with an increase in general and cancer-specific QOL in adolescent and young adult breast cancer survivors.
Young, Empowered, and Strong (YES), a mobile health intervention, was linked to improved general and cancer-specific improvements to quality of life along with a reduction in burdensome symptoms after 6 months in adolescent and young adults (AYA) breast cancer survivors, per data shared at the 2025 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium (SABCS).1
Findings from the YES clinical trial (NCT04906200) showed that, among 360 breast cancer survivors, at 6 months those who utilized YES (n = 179) reported a Quality of Life in Adult Cancer Survivors (QLACS) general summary score of 77.6, compared with a score of 78.1 among those who received usual care (n = 181). As detailed in a press release issued Friday morning by the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, at baseline, the mean QLACS scores for general and cancer-specific quality of life were 86.3 and 52.5 in the YES arm and 79.7 and 48.9 in the usual care arm, with higher QLACS scores indicate poorer quality of life.
By 6 months, mean QLACS scores for general quality of life had decreased by 8.7 points in the YES arm and 1.6 points for patients in the usual care arm, while mean cancer-specific quality of life scores decreased by 7.8 points in the YES arm and by 3 points in the usual care arm.
“YES is a scalable [mobile] health intervention that improved general and cancer-specific quality of life and reduced some burdensome symptoms at 6 months in our adolescent and young adult survivors,” said Ann H. Partridge, MD, founder and director of the Program for Young Adults with Breast Cancer at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, in the press briefing. “This represents a novel paradigm for supporting patients without clinician involvement, for the most part, in the survivorship period and thus it represents a very, potentially scalable public health effort for harder to reach populations who are very, very busy, can't get into the clinic and or can't very easily access the clinic.”
YES Study Design and Patient Characteristics
Patients were enrolled at 3 sites—Dana-Farber (n = 190), The Ohio State University (n = 118) and Columbia University Medical Center (n = 52)—and, in order to be eligible for the trial, had to be female, age 15 to 39 at the time of being diagnosed with stage 0 to III breast cancer, less than 3 years from the end of active treatment, no evidence of breast cancer recurrence and speak English.
“Adolescents and young adults with breast cancer, these patients and survivors experience substantial symptoms and concerns. … Beyond causing distress, these symptoms and concerns may influence longer-term decisions, including adherence to lifesaving adjuvant therapy and optimal health behaviors and follow up care and thereby impact not only quality of life, but disease and survival outcomes,” said Partidge. “Serial monitoring, using electronic patient reported outcomes or ePROs with clinician monitoring has improved outcomes for adults, predominantly those receiving chemotherapy or at later stages with advanced cancer.”
Patients were a median of 18.9 (IQR, 11.8, 27.2) months since diagnosis, and at diagnosis most—171 patients, or 47.5%—were age 35 to 39. The majority of patients—290, or 80.6%—were White and 320 patients, or 88.9%, lived in urban areas. Most patients had stage I (124, or 34.8%) or stage II (135, or 38.2%) disease at diagnosis, had hormone receptor (HR)–positive (266, or 74.5%) underwent bilateral mastectomy (156, or 43.8%) and received chemotherapy/biological/immunotherapy (276, or 77.3%).
The YES portal entailed monthly electronic patient-reported outcomes regarding symptoms, AYA concerns and assessments as well as a chat room and a journal function.
“The intervention was designed to engage and activate patients to self-manage symptoms and concerns, empowering them to contact their clinical team for unmet needs or concerns or symptoms,” said Patridge. “… The goal was to reduce feelings of isolation and reduce stress and thereby potentially improve our outcomes.”
Disclosures: Ann H. Patridge, MD, reported royalites from Wolters Kluwer, and serves as the chief scientific officer for Susan G. Komen.
References
- Partridge AH, Graham N, Dibble K. Randomized controlled trial of Young, Empowered & Strong (YES), an mHealth intervention for adolescent and young adult breast cancer survivors. Presented at: 2025 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium; December 9-12, 2025; San Antonio, TX. Abstract GS3-03.
- Mobile Health Tool Helps Improve Quality of Life For Young Breast Cancer Survivors, news release, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Dec. 12, 2025; https://www.dana-farber.org/newsroom/news-releases/2025/mobile-health-tool-helps-improve-quality-of-life-for-young-breast-cancer-survivors
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