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Breast-Conserving Therapy Better Than Mastectomy?
2010-12-20
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Breast-Conserving Therapy Better Than Mastectomy?
Breast Cancer Patients Live Longer After Breast-Conserving Therapy, Study Shows
By Charlene Laino
WebMD Health News
Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD
50s-ish woman with serious expression
Dec. 17, 2010 (San Antonio) -- In a surprising finding, a large study suggests that women with early breast cancer who undergo breast-conserving therapy live longer than those who have a mastectomy.
Still, both treatments work well, with about 93% of 62,770 women who had lumpectomy followed by radiation -- and 87% of 51,507 women who had a mastectomy -- alive more than four years after diagnosis.
"We found that lumpectomy followed by radiation therapy is very safe for women of all ages with early-stage breast cancer," says E. Shelley Hwang, MD, MPH, a breast cancer surgeon at the University of California, San Francisco.
A Visual Guide to Breast Cancer
Standard Therapy for Early Breast Cancer
Studies done over two decades ago established breast-conserving therapy (BCT) as a standard option for women with early breast cancer, showing it worked just as well as mastectomy.
Since then, other studies suggested that certain women -- those who have not yet reached menopause and those whose tumors are not fueled by hormones -- may be slightly more likely to have a recurrence if they have breast-conserving therapy than if they have mastectomy, Hwang tells WebMD.
As a result, more and more women are choosing mastectomy these days, she says.
"Our question was, is there a difference in survival when breast-conserving therapy and mastectomy are performed using modern techniques?" Hwang says. "The results were the opposite of what we expected."
BCT beat out mastectomy regardless of whether a woman was under 50 or over 50 and regardless of whether the tumor was fueled by hormones, the study showed.
The findings were presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.
Breast-Conserving Therapy vs. Mastectomy
Using the California Cancer Registry, Hwang and colleagues reviewed the records of women diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer between 1990 and 2004 who were treated with either BCT (lumpectomy plus radiation) or mastectomy.
About one-fourth of the women were younger than 50 when they were diagnosed and 82% had hormone-receptor-positive tumors. The women were followed for about nine years, on average.
Results showed that:
* Among women who were under 50 and had hormone-driven tumors, those who had BCT were about 12% less likely to die than those who had mastectomy.
* Among women who were under 50 and had hormone-receptor-negative tumors, those who had BCT were 13% to 29% less likely to die than those who had mastectomy, depending on tumor size.
* Among women who were 50 and over and had hormone-driven tumors, those who had BCT were about 20% less likely to die than those who had mastectomy.
* Among women who were 50 and over and had hormone-receptor-negative tumors, those who had BCT were about 17% less likely to die than those who had mastectomy.
All the analyses took into account race, the size and aggressiveness of the tumors, and whether the cancer had spread to the lymph nodes.
Breast Cancer Treatment: Weighing Choices
A weakness of the study was that researchers didn't have access to information on certain other factors, such as a woman's overall health, that could affect the results. Nevertheless, the results are reassuring, says Julia White, MD, professor of radiology at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee.
Mastectomy is still a good option, White says. But women shouldn't choose it out of fear that lumpectomy plus radiation is not as good, she says.
"We can be confident that breast-conserving therapy is at least equivalent to mastectomy" in extending women's lives, White tells WebMD.
Each woman should weigh the pros and cons of both treatments with her doctor, she says.
This study was presented at a medical conference. The findings should be considered preliminary as they have not yet undergone the "peer review" process, in which outside experts scrutinize the data prior to publication in a medical journal.