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Home » Breast Cancer

ONCOLOGY. Vol. 26 No. 9
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RESEARCH REPORT 

Early Breast Cancer in Older Women: Mastectomies Avoidable for Some

By Anna Azvolinsky, PhD1 | August 16, 2012
1Freelance Science Writer and CancerNetwork Contributor. Follow Her on Twitter

A study published in Cancer, the journal of the American Cancer Society, provides evidence that older women with early-stage breast cancer who undergo radiation therapy following a lumpectomy are less likely to require a subsequent mastectomy. This is contrary to current recommendations that suggest radiation therapy does not play a role in determining whether an older woman will need a mastectomy following a lumpectomy for her early-stage breast cancer. The authors suggest the current recommendations are based on inaccurate thinking of the risks and benefits of radiation therapy.

Lumpectomy: The retracted pectoralis minor showing the axillary clearance of the level-III group of axillary lymph nodes. Source: Chintamani, Rohan Khandelwal, Megha Tandon, et al. Cases Journal. 2009

“Even among this highly-selected group of older patients with lower-risk early breast cancer, there is a measurable association between radiation therapy and lower risk of subsequent mastectomy,” said Jeffrey Albert, MD, of the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Texas and lead author of the Cancer paper. The study, however, is only a subset of older women with breast cancer, those aged 70 or older with small tumors, less than 2 cm, and node-negative, estrogen receptor–positive disease who have received endocrine therapy.

The authors have recently studied the wider population of older women with breast cancer and published a nomogram, or individualized risk predictor that facilitates outcomes predictions. The nomogram has been published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. “We are currently developing an easy-to-use online version of this tool which we plan to make publicly available on the M.D. Anderson website,” said Albert.

The results suggest baseline characteristics that can identify those women who would most likely benefit from radiation therapy following lumpectomy and reducing unnecessary radiation therapy that adds cost and morbidity for patients. In a real-world setting, the study suggests radiation therapy after a lumpectomy is associated with a greater chance of avoiding a mastectomy for women ages 70 to 79 with early-stage breast cancer.

Benjamin Smith, MD, of the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, and colleagues used population-based data from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results–Medicare database to provide the risk of mastectomy for women 70 years and older and the benefit of radiation therapy to outcomes. The study cohort consisted of 7,403 women between the age of 70 and 79 who were diagnosed between 1992 and 2002. About 88% of the women in the cohort received radiation after their lumpectomy. 

The Current Guidelines

The current national guidelines suggest women older than 70 with early-stage breast cancer that has not yet spread to the lymph nodes and is driver by estrogen can be treated well with a lumpectomy and estrogen inhibitor without radiation therapy. Because older women have a lower risk for recurrence, the outcome of omitting radiation therapy from the treatment regimen has been addressed in several trials including the Cancer and Leukemia Group B (CALGB) 9343 trial, that included women aged 70 years and older with stage I, estrogen receptor (ER)–positive breast cancer. All of the women were randomized to either radiation therapy or no radiation therapy following a lumpectomy and tamoxifen(Drug information on tamoxifen) treatment. At a 10-year follow-up, the results showed radiation therapy did lower the risk of local recurrence, but the risk reduction was not statistically significant.

“The major influential CALGB 9343 study showed a modest benefit in local control with radiation but no improvement in mastectomy-free survival,” explained Albert. “Based on these data, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines now state that it is appropriate to omit radiation for this group of patients.” Because breast preservation is the primary goal of radiation therapy for older patients, the authors wanted to look at the association of radiation therapy and the risk of needing a subsequent mastectomy for patients treated in a real-world setting, not in a highly-controlled clinical trial setting.

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by David Shaun Bryant | August 16, 2012 8:02 PM EDT

These researchers do all these studies about avoiding mastectomies and the simple truth is when surgeons do mastectomies it is because the patients choose that option, it is really that simple. Surgeons don't "want"to do mastectomies, we only do them because the patient chooses that option. A better use of research time would be to explore why patients choose mastectomy over breast conservation. I guarantee the answer is because they don't want to run the risk of recurrence, and they don't value there breast nearly as much as society and the researchers think they do. There is the real world then there is the "ivory tower."






 
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