Less invasive treatment is associated with improved survival in early stage breast cancer
DUKE Medicines |
Patients with early stage breast cancer who were treated with
lumpectomy plus radiation may have a better chance of survival compared with
those who underwent mastectomy, according to Duke Medicine research. The study,
which appears online Jan. 28, 2013, in the journalCancer, raises new questions as to
the comparative effectiveness of breast-conserving therapies such as
lumpectomy, where only the tumor and surrounding tissue is surgically removed.
"Our
findings are observational but do suggest the possibility that women who were
treated with less invasive surgery had improved survival compared to those
treated with mastectomy for stage I or stage II breast cancer," said E.
Shelley Hwang, M.D., MPH, chief of breast surgery at Duke Cancer Institute and the
study's lead author.
Taking
advantage of 14 years of data from the California Cancer Registry, a source of
long-term outcome data for women diagnosed with and treated for breast cancer
in California, the research team found improved survival to be associated with
the less invasive treatment in all age groups, as well as those with both
hormone-sensitive and hormone-resistant cancers. Women age 50 and older at
diagnosis with hormone-sensitive tumors saw the largest benefit of choosing
lumpectomy plus radiation: they were 13 percent less likely to die from breast
cancer, and 19 percent less likely to die from any cause compared with those
undergoing mastectomy.
Prior
randomized trials have shown that when it comes to survival, lumpectomy with
radiation is as effective as mastectomy in treating early stage breast cancer.
As a result, the rate of women electing lumpectomy with radiation has climbed
in the past few decades.
However,
a recent trend has emerged with more early stage breast cancer patients, often
younger women with very early cancers, opting for mastectomy. These women may
perceive mastectomy to be more effective at eliminating early stage cancer and
therefore reducing the anxiety accompanying long-term surveillance.
"Given
the recent interest in mastectomy to treat early stage breast cancers despite
the research supporting lumpectomy, our study sought to understand what was
happening in the real world, how women receiving breast-conserving treatments
were faring in the general population," Hwang said.
The
team analyzed data from 112,154 women diagnosed with stage I or stage II breast
cancer between 1990 and 2004, including 61,771 who received lumpectomy and
radiation and 50,383 who had mastectomy without radiation.
The
researchers looked at age and other demographic factors, along with tumor type
and size to decipher whether each treatment had better outcomes for certain
groups of women. Patients were followed on average for 9.2 years.
The
researchers evaluated whether illnesses other than breast cancer, such as heart
and respiratory disease, may have influenced whether women chose lumpectomy or
mastectomy. Within three years of diagnosis, breast cancer patients who
underwent lumpectomy and radiation had higher survival rates than those who
chose mastectomy when all other illnesses were evaluated. This suggests that
women choosing lumpectomy may have been generally healthier.
However,
Hwang and her colleagues were surprised to also find that early stage breast
cancer patients treated with breast-conserving treatment had a significantly
better short-term survival rate from breast cancer than women who underwent
mastectomy. A subset analysis limited to women with stage I cancer only showed
consistent results.
"The
hopeful message is that lumpectomy plus radiation was an effective alternative
to mastectomy for early stage disease, regardless of age or tumor type,"
said Hwang. "Our study supports that even patients we thought might
benefit less from localized treatment, like younger patients with hormone-resistant
disease, can remain confident in lumpectomy as an equivalent and possibly
better treatment option."
The
authors emphasize that observational studies such as this one cannot establish
causality between type of surgery and outcome and that longer follow up is
needed. Nevertheless, this is a provocative observation that requires more
research to understand whether patient factors that were not available for
analysis might contribute to these observed survival differences.
In
addition to Hwang, study authors include Daphne Y. Lichtensztajn, Scarlett Lin
Gomez, and Christina A. Clarke of the Cancer Prevention Institute of
California. Barbara Fowble of the University of California San Francisco Helen
Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center also contributed to the research.
The
study was supported by National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology
and End Results Program (HHSN261201000140C) awarded to the Cancer Prevention
Institute of California. The collection of cancer incidence data used in this
study was supported by the California Department of Health Services.
Source: Duke Medicine
Posted by Unknown
on Tuesday, January 29, 2013.
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