Mastectomy
No Better Than Breast-Conserving Surgeries
20-year survival rates
are virtually identical
Evidence keeps pouring in
to support the belief that less surgery is better when it comes to breast
cancer.
Two studies appearing
in a recent issue of The New England Journal of Medicine
report that two different breast-conserving surgeries have the same
20-year survival rates as the previous gold standard, the radical
mastectomy.
"This confirms what we've
known for some time, that breast
conservation is equivalent to mastectomy in terms of survival,"
says Dr. Carina Biggs, director of the breast center at Maimonides
Medical Center in Brooklyn, N.Y.
Dr. Jay Brooks, chief
of hematology/oncology at the Ochsner Clinic Foundation in New Orleans,
says, "With the 20-year data, whether a woman decides to preserve
her breast or not keep it, the chances of being alive and free of
cancer 20 years from now is the same."
Mastectomy
- A Personal Decision
Mastectomy is a perfectly
fine operation to do if that is what a woman wants," he adds. "It's
a personal decision."
The first study, led by
Dr. Umberto Veronesi of the European Institute of Oncology in Milan,
Italy, looked at 701 women who were randomly assigned to one of
two groups: those receiving a radical mastectomy, and those receiving
a procedure known as a quadrantectomy, in which the quadrant of
the breast containing the tumor is removed.
Although the rate of local
recurrence (when the tumor reappeared in the same breast) was higher
in women who underwent a quadrantectomy, there was little difference
in the incidence of metastasis—or spread—of the cancer.
As a result, the overall survival rate was virtually identical among
women in the two groups, the researchers say.
Veronesi says the study
was the first randomized trial of mastectomy versus breast conservation.
"Now, after more than
20 years, the long-term follow-up of 701 women shows without any
doubt that the curability rates after breast-conservation surgery
are identical to that of the mastectomy patients," he says. "I believe
that today the treatment of a woman with early breast cancer with
mastectomy must be considered unethical."
Radical
Mastectomy Compared With Lumpectomy
The second study, conducted
by the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project
(NSABP) in Pittsburgh, was also a 20-year follow-up. It
compared a radical mastectomy with a lumpectomy (removing the tumor
and a margin of tissue), with and without radiation. This study
is known as trial B-06.
Among 1,851 women randomly
assigned to one of three treatment groups (total mastectomy, lumpectomy
alone, or lumpectomy with radiation), those receiving lumpectomy
with breast irradiation had the lowest incidence of a recurrence
in the same breast.
"That did not impact survival
because when the cancer came back locally they underwent a mastectomy,"
Brooks explains.
The authors of the Pittsburgh
study say it is unclear which of the two breast-conserving
surgeries is better. The lumpectomy removed tumors that were four
centimeters or less in diameter, while the quadrantectomy excised
tumors that were two centimeters or less in diameter.
Brooks believes the lumpectomy
is the better of the two options because "it gives a better cosmetic
result."
In either case, the authors
of the Italian study believe that about 300,000 women worldwide
each year with early breast cancer will undergo breast-conserving
surgery, rather than radical mastectomy, as a result of these two
trials.
"The failure to observe
a survival advantage of mastectomy after 20 years should convince
even the most determined skeptics that mastectomy is not superior
to breast-conservation for the treatment of breast cancer," Dr.
Monica Morrow, of the Northwestern University Feinberg School of
Medicine in Chicago, writes in an accompanying editorial.
The 25-year follow-up
results of an earlier study, the NSABP's landmark
B-04 trial, were published in August 2002. This study found no survival
difference between radical mastectomies and simple mastectomies,
in which lymph nodes and muscles are left in place.
The B-04 study, which
was launched in 1972, has been hailed as the one that launched the
trend toward less surgery for breast cancer patients.
The B-06 trial and its
Italian counterpart are also pivotal studies.
"The B-06 is a tremendous,
tremendous study," Brooks says. "Over the last 20 years we have
revolutionized the way women with breast cancer are treated. The
reason we know so much about breast cancer today is because of the
courage of women in the past to participate in research trials."
The B-06 trial, which
was the sixth study conducted by the NSABP, began in 1976.
This week, Brooks enrolled
a patient in the B-34 trial, which is looking at whether a particular
medication prevents metastasis of breast cancer to the bone.
Treatment choices for
breast cancer should be made in collaboration with your physician
based on your individual medical history. Always consult your physician
for more information.
Online
Resources
(Our Organization is not
responsible for the content of Internet sites.)
American
Cancer Society
National
Alliance of Breast Cancer Organizations
National
Breast Cancer Coalition
National
Cancer Institute
National
Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project (NSABP)
The
New England Journal of Medicine
Women's
Information Network Against Breast Cancer (WIN ABC)
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November 2002
Breast
Conservation Equivalent to Mastectomy in Terms of Survival
Mastectomy
- A Personal Decision
Radical
Mastectomy Compared With Lumpectomy
More
Choices in Breast Cancer Treatment
Online
Resources
In Other Breast Health News:
More
Choices in Breast Cancer Treatment
It is now about
patient involvement, experts say
Nearly 200,000 women and
about 1,000 men are diagnosed with breast cancer each year in the
United States.
Unlike the past, when
a biopsy was often followed by immediate surgical removal of the
affected breast, most of today's newly diagnosed patients have a
range of treatment options to weigh, as well as a greater voice
in when these treatments are used.
Shelly Blechman, vice
president of the Women's Information Network Against Breast
Cancer (WIN ABC), says these options fall into three broad
categories:
-
Surgical procedures such as biopsies,
lumpectomies, and mastectomies to establish the diagnosis,
remove the local disease in the breast, and estimate the extent
of the disease.
-
Radiation therapy to control
local disease in the breast or other sites where the cancer
has spread.
-
Chemotherapy or hormone therapy
to treat the breast cancer, reduce the likelihood of recurrence,
and treat the known spread of the cancer to other parts of
the body.
"There have been significant
improvements in the past decade in the treatment of breast cancer,"
Blechman says. "Not only are biopsies less invasive, but there are
a range of skin-sparing surgeries that can preserve most of a breast,
if the woman wants to do so, as well as advances like sentinel node
biopsies to identify whether cancer has spread."
"The availability of these
newer procedures provide women with a much greater voice in the
treatment process than they've ever had before," she adds.
While 39,600 American
women will die from the disease this year, breast cancer death rates
declined significantly from 1992 to 1996, with the largest decrease
in younger women—both Caucasian and African-American. This
decline is probably the result of earlier detection and improved
treatment, the American Cancer Society says.
Breast cancer patients'
participation in treatment decisions has been enhanced by advances
in breast cancer detection. In fact, the two go hand-in-hand, according
to most experts.
"The majority of women
diagnosed with breast cancer these days are in an early stage of
the disease," explains Dr. Jennifer Eng-Wong, a Cancer Prevention
Fellow at the National Cancer Institute.
"The emphasis on annual
screening means we are finding these cancers when they are growing
relatively slowly, and the prognosis is good. When cancer is in
Stage 0, I, or II, the patient still feels well," she explains.
"Emergency or next-day
surgery is not necessary," she adds. "And there's time for them
to take part with their surgeon, oncologist, radiologist, and others
on their treatment team in reaching a thoughtful, reasoned decision
about how they want their cancer treated."
Eng-Wong says it is not
uncommon for women with early stage breast cancer to take up to
six weeks to decide how to proceed with treatment, with no adverse
effect on their health or treatment outcomes.
"Most women seek all the
information they can get during this period," she says. "Many secure
second or even third opinions about whether a lumpectomy, mastectomy,
radiation, or chemotherapy is best for them. And most take the time
to prepare themselves and their family members emotionally for the
treatment processes and its aftermath."
Although it is still common
for effective breast cancer therapy to involve more than one form
of treatment, how these treatments are combined and timed is more
and more often a matter for the medical team and the patient to
determine collaboratively.
Some patients try a course
of chemotherapy or radiation before surgery. Others have a lumpectomy
or mastectomy first, followed by radiation, chemotherapy or both,
Eng-Wong says.
She notes that women with
later stage breast cancer—Stage III or IV —typically
do not have as much time to gather information, make a decision,
and prepare themselves for the treatment and its common side effects.
"When breast cancer has
reached Stage III or IV, there is definitely more of an urgency
to get the treatment under way," she says. "A delay of a week or
two between diagnosis and treatment is more common. Fortunately,
more and more American women are securing screening mammograms and
clinical breast exams on a regular basis. This helps to ensure that
when breast cancer does develop, it is detected promptly."
Always consult your physician
for more information.
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