TUESDAY, Aug. 12 (HealthDay News) -- The risk of relapse can linger for
some breast cancer survivors even after completing five years of what doctors
call systemic therapy, a new study found.
But, as gloomy as that news sounds, there is a relative bright spot: the risk
may not be as dire as many women fear.
"I would like to think these numbers are smaller than women think they are," the
study's lead author, Dr. Abenaa Brewster, a medical oncologist at the University
of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, said.
Most women, she added, "remain terrified they are going to relapse. I think the
message for women is, the risk may not be as large as they think."
Brewster's team evaluated 2,838 breast cancer patients whose disease ranged from
stage I to III. All had been treated with some form of adjuvant systemic therapy
between 1985 and 2001 and had remained disease-free for five years, which is
traditionally considered a landmark in cancer survival.
The women had a variety of treatments -- surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy or
endocrine therapy. Endocrine therapy involves tamoxifen, aromatase inhibitors
and a combination of the drugs and is usually given for five years.
About 10 years after the diagnosis, 89 percent of the women remained
recurrence-free. And about 80 percent remained recurrence-free 15 years after
the diagnosis.
In all, 216 patients developed a recurrence, Brewster said. She found that the
risk or recurrence varied by stage and tumor type. Those women with stage I
disease had a 7 percent chance of relapse; stage II, 11 percent; and stage III,
13 percent.
Besides the stage of cancer at diagnosis, hormone receptor status affected risk,
the study found. "Women who had ER-positive cancer were more likely to have late
recurrences than those with ER-negative," Brewster said. This finding held true
for premenopausal and postmenopausal women. While 34 ER-negative women had a
relapse, 149 ER-positive did.
"Estrogen receptor status is a tumor marker we look at," Brewster said. "We know
that those who have ER-positive tumors [have] cancers that are responsive to the
effects of estrogen."
While women in the study were taking a variety of hormone therapies, none took
five years of aromatase inhibitors, which are now the standard of care for
postmenopausal women but weren't when the study began in 1985, Brewster said.
The study findings were published online Aug. 12 in the Journal of the National
Cancer Institute.
Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, deputy chief medical officer for the American Cancer
Society, said the study findings leave some unanswered questions, such as the
best course of action at the five-year mark. But it offers some interesting
information, he added.
"The major message is that even though women may have gone through five years of
hormonal therapy, they are still at risk of relapse," he said. Another important
finding, he added, is that those women with ER-positive tumors seem to be at
higher risk than those with ER-negative tumors.
"Basically the jury is out on the potential value of additional treatment
strategies once the five years is completed," Lichtenfeld said. "Based on this
study, we need to be open to question whether other treatment programs may be
appropriate in some of these women after the five-year period is completed."
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