[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]  [Register] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

WATCH: Kamala Spox Tailspins When CNN Hits Him With Damning NYT Poll

Congress Warns MASS CASUALTY Event Could SHATTER US, Fear Of Civil War Growing

Lefties losing it: Rita Panahi blasts ‘anti-Israel troll’ Greta Thunberg

ABC Debate Scandal Explodes- Whistleblower Reveals Everything!!

DOJ publicizes Trump bounty, Mark Robinson campaign disaster, Philly under siege [Chicks on the Right]

Society has a snake (and ego) problem, & it will take the rest of us down.

Army Scraps DEI as U.S. Gears Up to Fight Israel's Wars

Israel: Rafael Factory 'Bombed'; Hezbollah Rockets 'Hit' Giant Arms Manufacturing Hub In Haifa

Did Kamala Just Nuke The Middle East?

In 1991 Bill Cooper told us this in his book "Behold A Pale Horse"

The Norco shootout - Flashback to 1980

UPDATED 7:23 PM EDT -- ***** FLASH ***** Israeli Jets Landing on Cyprus after Lebanon Bombings

Israeli Strikes Kill at Least 492 in Lebanon

State of emergency declared in Israel until 30 September amid Israeli escalation against Lebanon

Why Hezbollah wont fire its most advanced missiles at Israel yet

WTF: Kamala’s Most Mind-Numbing Diatribe to Date

The hospital murders - the details

Brilliantly Exposed! Defend Israel in Gaza, then you are a sociopath

NewsGuard to Punish Information Liberation for Exposing 'Hamas Mass Rape' Hoax

Israeli Diaspora Minister Says Lebanon Isnt a State, Advocates Taking South

FOX17: U.S. Universities Received $54 Billion from Foreign Governments in the Last 30 Years

Canada And Europe Dominate US Foreign Land Ownership

New Polling From NY Times/Siena College Puts Trump Back on Top, Liberals Outraged

Black Woman Roasts Kamala.

Turns Out One of the Women in Oprah's Propaganda Video for Commiela Doesn't Actually Support Her

Kamala Harris LOST IT & ENDED RALLY Early After Her Team PULLED HER AWAY For Being Too INTOXICATED

Stray Dog Regularly Visits Car Wash to Get Scrub and Back Rub

English-speaking? Get to back of the NHS queue! Hospital sees patients who need a translator first - and Britons second

Election Meddling? Zelensky Stumps For Harris On Taxpayer Dime

"What Could Go Wrong? Probably More Than You Might Imagine..."


Science/Tech
See other Science/Tech Articles

Title: Study faults partial radiation for breast cancer recurrance
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.gainesville.com/article/ ... /WIRE/111209715?p=all&tc=pgall
Published: Dec 7, 2011
Author: staff
Post Date: 2011-12-07 01:47:46 by Tatarewicz
Keywords: None
Views: 80
Comments: 2

SAN ANTONIO — New research casts doubt on a popular treatment for breast cancer: A week of radiation to part of the breast instead of longer treatment to all of it.

Women who were given partial radiation were twice as likely to need their breasts removed later because the cancer came back, doctors found.

The treatment uses radioactive pellets briefly placed in the breast instead of radiation beamed from a machine. At least 13 percent of older patients in the U.S. get this now, and it is popular with working women.

"Even women who aren't working appreciate convenience," but they may pay a price in effectiveness if too little tissue is being treated, said study leader Dr. Benjamin Smith of MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.

Results were to be reported Wednesday at a conference in San Antonio along with a more positive development: a new test that may help show which women need only surgery for a very early type of breast cancer called DCIS. The results suggest that about three-fourths of the 45,000 women diagnosed with DCIS annually in the U.S. could skip the radiation and hormone-blocking pills usually recommended to prevent a recurrence.

About 230,000 cases of breast cancer are diagnosed each year in the U.S., most in an early stage. Typical treatment is surgery to remove the lump, followed by radiation every weekday for five to seven weeks. That's tough, especially for older women and those in rural areas.

Doctors hoped that a shorter approach, called brachytherapy, would be just as good with fewer side effects. To do it, they temporarily place a thin tube into the cavity where the tumor was.

"You come in twice a day and there's a machine that puts in a radiation seed that stays there a few minutes and then you go home," Smith explained.

Treatment takes only five days and the total radiation dose is comparable to the longer method. But a smaller area — just around the lump — gets treated instead of the whole breast.

Although at least three companies sell equipment for brachytherapy, no big studies have tested its safety and effectiveness.

Researchers looked at Medicare records on 130,535 women who had lumps removed and radiation. Less than 1 percent chose brachytherapy in 2000 but that rose to 13 percent by 2007.

After accounting for differences in age, tumor size and other factors, researchers found that within five years, 4 percent of brachytherapy patients needed surgery to remove the breast where the original tumor had been versus only 2 percent of those given traditional radiation. Hospitalization, infections, broken ribs and breast pain also were more common with brachytherapy.

It remains experimental, and women who want it should join a more rigorous study of it going on now, said Dr. Peter Ravdin, breast cancer chief at the UT Health Science Center in San Antonio.

"I'm putting patients on the trial" and not recommending it otherwise, he said.

Brachytherapy costs about twice as much as standard radiation, estimated at $10,000 to $20,000.

Other research involves a test that measures the activity of genes that help predict recurrence risks for women with DCIS, or ductal carcinoma in situ — cancer that is confined to a milk duct. It's usually found from mammograms before it causes symptoms.

Surgery cures most cases, but about 20 percent will recur within 10 years, so doctors usually recommend five to seven weeks of radiation or years of hormone-blocking drugs.

"Although it works, it's a lot of treatment and we treat the many to benefit the few," because there's no good way to tell who can safely skip it, said Dr. Lawrence Solin of Albert Einstein Medical Center in Philadelphia.

He led a study with other researchers and the test's maker, Genomic Health Inc. of Redwood City, Calif. The company already sells a test to gauge which women with invasive cancers most need chemotherapy versus hormone-blocking medicines alone. The DCIS test uses some of the same genes.

Doctors checked its predictive value using 327 stored tumor samples. Test scores separated women into low, high and medium risk groups that reflected how they fared 10 years later. About 75 percent fell into a low-risk category that could be spared treatment beyond surgery.

"If it's right it would have significant value for patients," but this needs to be validated in a bigger study before the test is widely used, said Robert Clarke, dean for research at Georgetown University Medical Center. "It tells you how well it sorts out a population, but it doesn't tell you how good it is at putting an individual woman in the right group."

Dr. Joseph Sparano of Montefiore Einstein Center for Cancer Care in New York, who helped conduct the study, disagreed.

"Doctors are making decisions already without this information" and the test gives a valuable new clue, he said.

But an expensive one. The company will charge the same for the DCIS test as its current one for invasive breast cancer — $4,175, which Medicare and most insurers cover, said chief medical officer Dr. Steven Shak.

The company plans to start selling it by the end of the year under federal lab rules that just require proof that the test reliably measures genes — not that this has value for patients.

The cancer conference is sponsored by the American Association for Cancer Research, Baylor College of Medicine and the UT Health Science Center.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Tatarewicz (#0)

said study leader Dr. Benjamin Smith

Dr. Joseph Sparano of Montefiore Einstein Center who helped conduct the study, disagreed

said chief medical officer Dr. Steven Shak.

I don't trust any of them.

It is vital to understand that there is no truth without discernment and no wisdom without the truth. What then is “faith” but an effort to confound truth and wisdom?

angK  posted on  2011-12-07   2:12:00 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Tatarewicz (#0)

If I get breast cancer, I hope to opt for mastectomy. Gone is better than a time bomb attached to your chest with all sorts of toxic treatments added to"preserve the breast".

octavia  posted on  2011-12-07   15:12:11 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]  [Register]