Radiation therapy reduces Cancer recurrence in older
women
Newswise — Radiation therapy after lumpectomy and
five years of treatment with the drug tamoxifen can
dramatically reduce the risk of both cancer
recurrence and new tumors in older women with early
breast cancer, according to researchers from Wake
Forest University School of Medicine and colleagues.
“While these treatments are standard care for
younger patients, it is has been shown that older
women are less likely to receive them,” said lead
author Ann M. Geiger, M.P.H., Ph.D., an associate
professor of public health sciences at Wake Forest
and formerly of Kaiser Permanente Southern
California. “Our results provide strong evidence of
the importance of providing high quality care to all
patients, regardless of age.”
The results, reported on-line today in Cancer,
a journal of the American Cancer Society, will be
published in the March 1 print issue of the journal.
Geiger said there is a pressing need for information
about the effectiveness of breast cancer treatments
in women over 65 because this is an expanding
segment of the U.S. population. Women in this age
group are at the highest risk for breast cancer and
make up half of those diagnosed, but only recently
have been included in treatment trials.
“Based on our findings, we recommend that
mastectomy, or lumpectomy with radiation therapy,
along with adequate duration of hormone therapy for
women with hormone-responsive tumors, be considered
standard therapy in women of all ages and health
conditions, except for those with very limited life
expectancies,” said Geiger.
The study also included women undergoing
chemotherapy, but the number of participants wasn’t
large enough to evaluate the treatment’s
effectiveness.
The study involved 1,837 women age 65 or older with
early stage breast cancer that was confined to the
breast or lymph nodes. The women underwent either
mastectomy or lumpectomy, also known as
breast-conserving surgery, from 1990 to 1994.
Treatment was at one of six health systems (in
Washington, Massachusetts, Minnesota, California,
and New Mexico) that were part of the Cancer
Research Network funded by the National Cancer
Institute.
Participants were identified from medical records
and were followed for 10 years. Researchers recorded
all cancer recurrences: “local” recurrences in the
same breast, “regional” recurrences in the lymph
nodes, skin or chest muscle on the same side as the
original diagnosis, and “distant” recurrences in the
brain or other areas of the body. They also recorded
cases of new breast tumors, not related to the
original tumor, in the opposite breast -- known as a
second primary breast cancer.
Twenty percent of women treated with mastectomy or
lumpectomy experienced a recurrence or second
primary breast cancer during the follow-up. Women
treated with lumpectomy but no radiation therapy had
a risk of local or regional recurrence that was 3.5
times higher than women radiation therapy after
their surgery. The increased risk of any recurrence
or second primary breast cancer was 60 percent
higher.
The study also revealed that for women who took
tamoxifen, but not chemotherapy, those who took the
drug for less than a year had a 90 percent higher
risk of a recurrence than women who took the drug
for five years. Tamoxifen, a drug that blocks the
effects of estrogen on the body, is often used to
treat women whose tumors are sensitive to estrogen.
One-third of the study participants were 65-69 years
old, half were 70-79 and 20 percent were 80 and
older. About 80 percent of the women were white, 10
percent were black and 10 percent were Hispanic,
Asian or Pacific Islanders.
Co-researchers were Soe Soe Thwin, M.S., Timothy L.
Lash, D.Sc., and Marianne Prout, M.D., all with
Boston University School of Public Health; Diana S.M.
Buist, Group Health Center for Health Studies in
Seattle, Wash.; Feifei Wei, Ph.D., HealthPartners
Research Foundation in Minneapolis, Minn.; Terry S.
Field, D.Sc., Meyers Primary Care Institute/Fallon
Community Health Plan; Marianne Ulcickas Yood, Henry
Ford Health System; Floyd J. Frost, Ph.D., Lovelace
Health Systems, Albuquerque, N.M.; and Shelley M.
Enger, Ph.D., Kaiser Permanente Southern California.
Rebecca A. Silliman, M.D., Ph.D., of Boston
University Medical Center was the lead investigator
for the larger study of which this was one piece.
The goal of the research network is to improve the
effectiveness of cancer prevention and treatment
through research that identifies system, provider,
treatment, and patient factors affecting outcomes.
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center is an
academic health system comprised of North Carolina
Baptist Hospital and Wake Forest University Health
Sciences, which operates the university’s School of
Medicine. U.S. News & World Report ranks Wake Forest
University School of Medicine 18th in family
medicine, 20th in geriatrics, 25th in primary care
and 41st in research among the nation's medical
schools. It ranks 35th in research funding by the
National Institutes of Health. Almost 150 members of
the medical school faculty are listed in Best
Doctors in America.