Guest guest Posted December 29, 2007 Report Share Posted December 29, 2007 > HIGHLIGHTS FROM 2007 SAN ANTONIO BREAST CANCER CONFERENCE > > Vitamin D Supplementation Reduces Fatigue and Muscle Pain in Women With > Early-Stage Breast Cancer: Presented at SABCS [Doctor's Guide] > [NOTE: For the full article, please follow the supplied link.] > SAN ANTONIO, TX- December 17, 2007 - Treatment of low levels of vitamin D in > women with early stage breast cancer appears to reduce fatigue and muscle > pain associated with aromatase inhibitor therapy, researchers reported here at > the 30th San Breast Cancer Symposium (SABCS). > The preliminary results involving 40 women out of planned enrollment > of 60 women were presented in a poster presentation here on December 16 by > Qaram Khan, MD, Assistant Professor of Hematology/Oncology, University of Kansas > Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas. Although the study showed that > vitamin D insufficiency was already present in 75% of women at the start of > adjuvant aromatase inhibitor therapy, when vitamin D supplementation was added to > treatment, there was a decrease in fatigue and muscle pain, Dr. Khan > reported. > Men Unaware of Their Risk of Cancer When Female Family Members Test Positive > for Cancer-Causing Gene Mutation [Fox Chase Cancer Center] SAN ANTONIO (Dec. > 2007) > Men whose mothers, sisters or daughters test positive for a > cancer-causing gene mutation also have an increased risk of developing the disease but > are unaware of that risk. That is the conclusion of a study at Fox Chase > Cancer Center exploring how families communicate genetic test results. > Like their female relatives, fathers, sons or brothers can also harbor > a mutation in the BRCA 1 or 2 genes. Male carriers of these mutations, more > commonly called the " breast cancer genes, " face a 14 percent lifetime risk of > developing prostate cancer as well as a 6 percent lifetime risk of developing > breast cancer. > " Despite these health implications, we have found a lack of > understanding of genetic test results among men in these families, " said B. Daly, > M.D., Ph.D., senior vice president for population science at Fox Chase and > lead author of the new research presented at the San Breast Cancer > Symposium today. > Daly and her colleagues interviewed 24 men, each with a first-degree > female relative who tested positive for having a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation. The > women reported telling the results of their genetic test result to the male > relative in the study, though only 18 of the men remember receiving the > results. > Daly said what they learned demonstrates a level of cognitive and > emotional distance that men experience from the genetic testing process. > Nearly half of the men (seven) who remembered receiving results did not > believe that the test results increased their own risk of cancer. Only five > (28 percent) could correctly identify their chance of being a mutation > carrier. > " We devote a significant amount of time learning how best to > communicate genetic test results to women, but this study shows we also need to help > them communicate the information to their male family members who may be > impacted by the test results, " concluded Daly. > Fourteen of the 18 men who recalled receiving the results expressed > some level of concern about the meaning of the test result, but most (11) > directed their concern toward other family members, primarily daughters and > sisters. > " Based on the responses, we were not surprised to learn that the level > of interest in genetic testing was relatively low. Of the six men who did > express interest, half said they'd do it for their children's sake. " > Even Tiny Breast Tumors Can Be Aggressive and May Require Maximum Therapy [ > Eureka News Service] SAN ANTONIO > Breast tumors that are 1 centimeter in size or smaller - no more than > 0.4 inch in length -can still be very aggressive and may require more > intensive therapy than is routinely offered today, say researchers at Mayo Clinic in > ville, Fla. > The study, which is being presented at the San Breast Cancer > Symposium, is one of the few that has looked at outcomes of women who have tiny > tumors that have not spread to the lymph nodes. The findings suggest that > outcome of two types of breast cancer ? those classified as HER2 positive > (HER2+) and triple negative ? may not depend on size alone. > " This is a small study and so we can't make treatment recommendations > from it, but it appears that biology and not only size matters when it comes > to selecting therapy for small, invasive tumors, " says the study's lead > researcher, Surabhi Amar, M.D., a fellow in Hematology/Oncology at Mayo Clinic in > ville. > Currently, there are no definitive treatment guidelines for tumors less > than 1 centimeter in size because clinical trials are usually conducted on > women whose tumors are larger or are associated with lymph node involvement, > Dr. Amar says. " We just don't have extensive data on tumors this small, so > treatment becomes a matter of physician discretion. " > Researchers at all three Mayo sites - ville; sdale, Ariz.; > and Rochester, Minn. ? participated in the study, which examined 401 women > who were treated for breast cancer between 2001 and 2005 at the breast cancer > clinics in ville and sdale. > The vast majority (87 percent, or 350 women) had tumors that were > classified as ER/PR positive and HER2 negative (in short, HER2 negative/ER/PR+). > Twenty-seven women (6.7 percent) had tumors that were HER2+ and 24 patients > (5.9 percent) were diagnosed with triple negative cancer ? that is, ER/PR > negative and HER2 negative. These classifications refer to receptors present on > the outside of the tumor cell that are fueling growth, and cancer that is > ER/PR+ is considered the least aggressive of the three categories. Generally, > studies have shown that in all patients diagnosed with breast cancer, 15 to 20 > percent of breast cancers are HER2+ and about 10 to 15 percent are triple > negative. > Patients were followed for an average of almost three years, and so far > researchers have data on all patients with HER2+ and triple negative cancers > and on 219 women with HER2 negative/ER/PR+ cancer. Researchers found that: > There were many more grade 2 and grade 3 tumors in women with the two rarer > subtypes ? 92 percent in HER2+ cancer and 91 percent in triple negative > cancer ? compared to HER2 negative/ER/PR+ cancer (36 percent). Tumors are graded > 1-3, and higher grade tumors are more likely to grow faster and be more > difficult to treat than lower grade tumors. > Cancer came back more frequently in HER2+ tumors (7.4 percent of patients > relapsed) and triple negative cancers (12.5 percent), compared to HER2 > negative/ER/PR+ cancer (1.3 percent). > Although the overall outcome of these small, lymph-node-negative tumors was > excellent (overall survival 97.4 percent, disease free survival 95.1 > percent), these outcomes were different in the three subgroups studied. The death > rate was higher in triple negative breast cancer: there was one death in the 24 > patients with triple negative tumors, none in the HER2+ group of 27 women, > and one death related to relapse in 219 women with HER2 negative/ER/PR+ cancer. > Although only small numbers of women have the rarer cancer subtypes included > in this study, the findings suggest that women with HER2+ and triple > negative tumors should receive as much treatment as possible in order to prevent > cancer relapse, Dr. Amar says. Researchers found that only 35 percent of women > with triple negative cancer were treated with adjuvant chemotherapy > (chemotherapy after surgery) despite the higher grade of the tumors. " Chemotherapy > may not work as well as we would like in these tumors, but, still, physicians > who treat patients with triple negative cancer should be aware of the higher > risk of relapse, even if tumors are quite small, " she says. Adjuvant > chemotherapy was offered to 28 percent of patients with HER2+ tumors, and only 4 > percent received the targeted therapy Herceptin, which has been designed > specifically to treat this class of tumors. " Should Herceptin be offered to such > small node-negative tumors? There is not enough data currently to answer this > question, " Dr. Amar says. " But this study definitely highlights the fact that > HER2 positive tumors, even if very small, may warrant more aggressive > therapy. " > Only 3.9 percent of patients with HER2 neg/ER/PR+ cancer were treated > with chemotherapy. " So although the rates of adjuvant chemotherapy use were > significantly higher in the HER2+ and triple negative subgroups, these groups > still showed a higher relapse rate, " she says. The study's senior investigator > is Edith A. , M.D., director of Mayo Clinic's Multidisciplinary Breast > Clinic in ville. Other researchers contributing to the study include > Ann E. McCullough, M.D.; Xochiquetzal J. Geiger, M.D.; B. McNeil, > Ph.D; Winston Tan, M.D.; E. Coppola; Beiyun Chen, M.D.; and Judy C. Boughey, > M.D. > Drug May Reduce Breast Cancer Recurrence [Eureka News Service] > The drug anastrozole reduced the risk of breast cancer recurrence among > postmenopausal women who took it for three years following treatment with > tamoxifen. > A previous clinical trial showed that breast cancer patients who were > still disease-free after taking tamoxifen for five years had their risk of > recurrence further reduced if they received five additional years of treatment > with the drug letrozole. Both anastrozole and letrozole are in the same class > of drugs, known as aromatase inhibitors. > Raimund Jakesz, M.D., of Vienna Medical University and colleagues > conducted a similar trial-the Austrian Breast and Colorectal Cancer Study Group > trial-by randomly assigning breast cancer patients who had taken five years of > tamoxifen to receive either three years of anastrozole or no further > treatment. > After more than five years of follow-up, women who received anastrozole > had a 38 percent reduction in the risk of recurrence compared with women who > received no further treatment, but there was no difference in overall > survival between the two groups. No unexpected side effects occurred in these > women. > " The more manageable side effect profile of anastrozole compared with > tamoxifen may allow the duration of adjuvant treatment to extend beyond the > 5-year period recommended for tamoxifen, " the authors write. > In an accompanying editorial, Tatiana Prowell, M.D., and Vered Stearns, > M.D., of s Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore compare > this trial with similar breast cancer trials of aromatase inhibitors and > discuss the factors that are important for deciding which drugs to give patients > and for how long. > " Results: from both completed and ongoing studies should not only help > to identify women who can safely forego adjuvant therapy as well as those who > are best treated with short-term and long-term adjuvant hormone therapy but > also provide a rationale for the selection of the most appropriate drug or > drugs to incorporate in adjuvant therapy, " the editorialists write. > Patients More Likely to be Diagnosed with Cancer Soon after Blood > Transfusions [Eureka News Service] > Blood transfusion recipients have a slightly increased risk of cancer in > the months immediately after the transfusion, but this may be due to the > need for blood transfusions in patients with undiagnosed cancer. > Some researchers have speculated that blood transfusions could increase > the recipient's risk of cancer through transmission of biologic agents or > effects on the immune system. To investigate this, Henrik Hjalgrim, M.D., > Ph.D., of Statens Serum Institut in Copenhagen and colleagues identified nearly > 890,000 individuals who were cancer-free when they received blood transfusions > after 1968 in Sweden and Denmark. The researchers tracked the patients to > determine whether they were at increased risk of subsequent cancer. > Among this group, 80,990 cancers were diagnosed, whereas only 55,788 > cancers were expected. During the first six months after a transfusion, > patients had more than a fivefold increase in overall cancer risk compared with the > general population, but after this period, the risk declined rapidly to > levels approaching those of the general population . > " There has been speculation that blood transfusions promote tumor > growth and this could precipitate incipient cancers. However, we speculate that > other mechanisms unrelated to blood transfusion could account for the observed > increased incidence of cancer at early times after blood transfusion, " the > authors write. > ______________________________________________________ > Recurrence Score Assay Predicts Adjuvant Therapy Benefit in Women With > Node-Positive, ER-Positive Breast Cancer > > http://clinicaloptions.com/Oncology/Conference%20Coverage/Breast%20Cancer%20Dec%\ 202007/Tracks/Prognosis/Capsules/10.aspx > According to the results of a study presented at the 2007 San > Breast Cancer Symposium, the Oncotype DX? test may help guide chemotherapy > decisions among women with node-positive, estrogen receptor-positive breast > cancer. > Although chemotherapy is recommended for many women with early-stage > breast cancer, the benefit of chemotherapy varies. Identifying in advance those > women who are most likely to benefit from chemotherapy may allow for more > individualized treatment. This would allow women who are unlikely to benefit > from chemotherapy to avoid the toxic effects of treatment. > Oncotype DX is a genomic test that predicts the likelihood of a cancer > recurrence, the likelihood of benefit from chemotherapy, and the likelihood > of survival in patients with newly diagnosed breast cancer that has not spread > to their lymph nodes (node-negative) and is estrogen receptor (ER)-positive. > Oncotype DX evaluates the activity of 21 genes from a sample of the > patient?s cancer to determine the patient?s Recurrence Score. The Recurrence > Score ranges from 0 to 100, with a higher score indicating a greater risk of > recurrence. > In addition to its established role among women with node-negative > breast cancer, Oncotype DX may also help predict recurrence risk and chemotherapy > benefit among women with node-positive breast cancer. > To explore the use of Oncotype DX among postmenopausal women with > node-positive, ER-positive breast cancer, researchers evaluated information from > a Phase III clinical trial. Information was available for 367 patients; 148 > patients had been treated with tamoxifen alone, and 219 had been treated with > chemotherapy plus tamoxifen. > Forty percent of the study participants were classified as low risk > (Recurrence Score less than 18), 28% were classified as intermediate risk > (Recurrence Score 18-30), and 32% were classified as high-risk (Recurrence Score 31 > or higher). > In the women treated with tamoxifen alone, higher Recurrence Scores > were linked with worse disease-free survival. > Among women with a low Recurrence Score, disease-free and overall > survival were not significantly improved by the addition of chemotherapy. Ten-year > disease-free survival was 60% among women treated with tamoxifen alone and > 64% among women treated with chemotherapy plus tamoxifen. > Among women with a high Recurrence Score, disease-free and overall > survival were significantly improved by the addition of chemotherapy. Ten-year > disease-free survival was 43% among women treated with tamoxifen alone and 55% > among women treated with chemotherapy plus tamoxifen. > These results suggest that Oncotype DX may help guide decisions about > the need for chemotherapy among patients with node-positive, ER-positive > breast cancer. The addition of chemotherapy significantly improved outcomes among > women with a high Recurrence Score. Furthermore, the researchers note: A low > [Recurrence Score] may define a group of women with positive nodes who do not > appear to benefit from anthracyline-based adjuvant chemotherapy. > > Reference: Albain K, Barlow W, Shak S et al. Prognostic and predictive value > of the 21-gene recurrence score assay in postmenopausal, node-positive, > ER-positive breast cancer (S8814,INT0100). Presented at the 30th Annual San > Breast Cancer Symposium. San , TX, December 13-16, 2007. Abstract > #10. > +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > Breast Cancer Options free pocket sized resource guide is available with > both Hudson Valley and National support, educational, advocacy, financial, legal > and other services. Please call or email us if you would like a copy mailed > to you. > 845:339-4673 or hope@... > ++++++ > 2008 Healthy Lifestyles Calendar: This 12-page calendar focuses on a topic > relevant to breast cancer, prevention and risk reduction: Precautionary > Principle; Household, Cleaning Products; Cosmetics, Beauty & Health Products; > Stress Reduction; Exercise; Diet; Plastics; Vitamins; Herbs & Supplements; > Screening & Detection; Detoxification, Sleep, Hormones & Breast Cancer & Advocacy. > Calendar is free but we ask for a donation (if possible) for shipping costs. > +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > ************************************** See AOL's top rated recipes (http://food.aol.com/top-rated-recipes?NCID=aoltop00030000000004) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2007 Report Share Posted December 29, 2007 > HIGHLIGHTS FROM 2007 SAN ANTONIO BREAST CANCER CONFERENCE > > Vitamin D Supplementation Reduces Fatigue and Muscle Pain in Women With > Early-Stage Breast Cancer: Presented at SABCS [Doctor's Guide] > [NOTE: For the full article, please follow the supplied link.] > SAN ANTONIO, TX- December 17, 2007 - Treatment of low levels of vitamin D in > women with early stage breast cancer appears to reduce fatigue and muscle > pain associated with aromatase inhibitor therapy, researchers reported here at > the 30th San Breast Cancer Symposium (SABCS). > The preliminary results involving 40 women out of planned enrollment > of 60 women were presented in a poster presentation here on December 16 by > Qaram Khan, MD, Assistant Professor of Hematology/Oncology, University of Kansas > Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas. Although the study showed that > vitamin D insufficiency was already present in 75% of women at the start of > adjuvant aromatase inhibitor therapy, when vitamin D supplementation was added to > treatment, there was a decrease in fatigue and muscle pain, Dr. Khan > reported. > Men Unaware of Their Risk of Cancer When Female Family Members Test Positive > for Cancer-Causing Gene Mutation [Fox Chase Cancer Center] SAN ANTONIO (Dec. > 2007) > Men whose mothers, sisters or daughters test positive for a > cancer-causing gene mutation also have an increased risk of developing the disease but > are unaware of that risk. That is the conclusion of a study at Fox Chase > Cancer Center exploring how families communicate genetic test results. > Like their female relatives, fathers, sons or brothers can also harbor > a mutation in the BRCA 1 or 2 genes. Male carriers of these mutations, more > commonly called the " breast cancer genes, " face a 14 percent lifetime risk of > developing prostate cancer as well as a 6 percent lifetime risk of developing > breast cancer. > " Despite these health implications, we have found a lack of > understanding of genetic test results among men in these families, " said B. Daly, > M.D., Ph.D., senior vice president for population science at Fox Chase and > lead author of the new research presented at the San Breast Cancer > Symposium today. > Daly and her colleagues interviewed 24 men, each with a first-degree > female relative who tested positive for having a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation. The > women reported telling the results of their genetic test result to the male > relative in the study, though only 18 of the men remember receiving the > results. > Daly said what they learned demonstrates a level of cognitive and > emotional distance that men experience from the genetic testing process. > Nearly half of the men (seven) who remembered receiving results did not > believe that the test results increased their own risk of cancer. Only five > (28 percent) could correctly identify their chance of being a mutation > carrier. > " We devote a significant amount of time learning how best to > communicate genetic test results to women, but this study shows we also need to help > them communicate the information to their male family members who may be > impacted by the test results, " concluded Daly. > Fourteen of the 18 men who recalled receiving the results expressed > some level of concern about the meaning of the test result, but most (11) > directed their concern toward other family members, primarily daughters and > sisters. > " Based on the responses, we were not surprised to learn that the level > of interest in genetic testing was relatively low. Of the six men who did > express interest, half said they'd do it for their children's sake. " > Even Tiny Breast Tumors Can Be Aggressive and May Require Maximum Therapy [ > Eureka News Service] SAN ANTONIO > Breast tumors that are 1 centimeter in size or smaller - no more than > 0.4 inch in length -can still be very aggressive and may require more > intensive therapy than is routinely offered today, say researchers at Mayo Clinic in > ville, Fla. > The study, which is being presented at the San Breast Cancer > Symposium, is one of the few that has looked at outcomes of women who have tiny > tumors that have not spread to the lymph nodes. The findings suggest that > outcome of two types of breast cancer ? those classified as HER2 positive > (HER2+) and triple negative ? may not depend on size alone. > " This is a small study and so we can't make treatment recommendations > from it, but it appears that biology and not only size matters when it comes > to selecting therapy for small, invasive tumors, " says the study's lead > researcher, Surabhi Amar, M.D., a fellow in Hematology/Oncology at Mayo Clinic in > ville. > Currently, there are no definitive treatment guidelines for tumors less > than 1 centimeter in size because clinical trials are usually conducted on > women whose tumors are larger or are associated with lymph node involvement, > Dr. Amar says. " We just don't have extensive data on tumors this small, so > treatment becomes a matter of physician discretion. " > Researchers at all three Mayo sites - ville; sdale, Ariz.; > and Rochester, Minn. ? participated in the study, which examined 401 women > who were treated for breast cancer between 2001 and 2005 at the breast cancer > clinics in ville and sdale. > The vast majority (87 percent, or 350 women) had tumors that were > classified as ER/PR positive and HER2 negative (in short, HER2 negative/ER/PR+). > Twenty-seven women (6.7 percent) had tumors that were HER2+ and 24 patients > (5.9 percent) were diagnosed with triple negative cancer ? that is, ER/PR > negative and HER2 negative. These classifications refer to receptors present on > the outside of the tumor cell that are fueling growth, and cancer that is > ER/PR+ is considered the least aggressive of the three categories. Generally, > studies have shown that in all patients diagnosed with breast cancer, 15 to 20 > percent of breast cancers are HER2+ and about 10 to 15 percent are triple > negative. > Patients were followed for an average of almost three years, and so far > researchers have data on all patients with HER2+ and triple negative cancers > and on 219 women with HER2 negative/ER/PR+ cancer. Researchers found that: > There were many more grade 2 and grade 3 tumors in women with the two rarer > subtypes ? 92 percent in HER2+ cancer and 91 percent in triple negative > cancer ? compared to HER2 negative/ER/PR+ cancer (36 percent). Tumors are graded > 1-3, and higher grade tumors are more likely to grow faster and be more > difficult to treat than lower grade tumors. > Cancer came back more frequently in HER2+ tumors (7.4 percent of patients > relapsed) and triple negative cancers (12.5 percent), compared to HER2 > negative/ER/PR+ cancer (1.3 percent). > Although the overall outcome of these small, lymph-node-negative tumors was > excellent (overall survival 97.4 percent, disease free survival 95.1 > percent), these outcomes were different in the three subgroups studied. The death > rate was higher in triple negative breast cancer: there was one death in the 24 > patients with triple negative tumors, none in the HER2+ group of 27 women, > and one death related to relapse in 219 women with HER2 negative/ER/PR+ cancer. > Although only small numbers of women have the rarer cancer subtypes included > in this study, the findings suggest that women with HER2+ and triple > negative tumors should receive as much treatment as possible in order to prevent > cancer relapse, Dr. Amar says. Researchers found that only 35 percent of women > with triple negative cancer were treated with adjuvant chemotherapy > (chemotherapy after surgery) despite the higher grade of the tumors. " Chemotherapy > may not work as well as we would like in these tumors, but, still, physicians > who treat patients with triple negative cancer should be aware of the higher > risk of relapse, even if tumors are quite small, " she says. Adjuvant > chemotherapy was offered to 28 percent of patients with HER2+ tumors, and only 4 > percent received the targeted therapy Herceptin, which has been designed > specifically to treat this class of tumors. " Should Herceptin be offered to such > small node-negative tumors? There is not enough data currently to answer this > question, " Dr. Amar says. " But this study definitely highlights the fact that > HER2 positive tumors, even if very small, may warrant more aggressive > therapy. " > Only 3.9 percent of patients with HER2 neg/ER/PR+ cancer were treated > with chemotherapy. " So although the rates of adjuvant chemotherapy use were > significantly higher in the HER2+ and triple negative subgroups, these groups > still showed a higher relapse rate, " she says. The study's senior investigator > is Edith A. , M.D., director of Mayo Clinic's Multidisciplinary Breast > Clinic in ville. Other researchers contributing to the study include > Ann E. McCullough, M.D.; Xochiquetzal J. Geiger, M.D.; B. McNeil, > Ph.D; Winston Tan, M.D.; E. Coppola; Beiyun Chen, M.D.; and Judy C. Boughey, > M.D. > Drug May Reduce Breast Cancer Recurrence [Eureka News Service] > The drug anastrozole reduced the risk of breast cancer recurrence among > postmenopausal women who took it for three years following treatment with > tamoxifen. > A previous clinical trial showed that breast cancer patients who were > still disease-free after taking tamoxifen for five years had their risk of > recurrence further reduced if they received five additional years of treatment > with the drug letrozole. Both anastrozole and letrozole are in the same class > of drugs, known as aromatase inhibitors. > Raimund Jakesz, M.D., of Vienna Medical University and colleagues > conducted a similar trial-the Austrian Breast and Colorectal Cancer Study Group > trial-by randomly assigning breast cancer patients who had taken five years of > tamoxifen to receive either three years of anastrozole or no further > treatment. > After more than five years of follow-up, women who received anastrozole > had a 38 percent reduction in the risk of recurrence compared with women who > received no further treatment, but there was no difference in overall > survival between the two groups. No unexpected side effects occurred in these > women. > " The more manageable side effect profile of anastrozole compared with > tamoxifen may allow the duration of adjuvant treatment to extend beyond the > 5-year period recommended for tamoxifen, " the authors write. > In an accompanying editorial, Tatiana Prowell, M.D., and Vered Stearns, > M.D., of s Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore compare > this trial with similar breast cancer trials of aromatase inhibitors and > discuss the factors that are important for deciding which drugs to give patients > and for how long. > " Results: from both completed and ongoing studies should not only help > to identify women who can safely forego adjuvant therapy as well as those who > are best treated with short-term and long-term adjuvant hormone therapy but > also provide a rationale for the selection of the most appropriate drug or > drugs to incorporate in adjuvant therapy, " the editorialists write. > Patients More Likely to be Diagnosed with Cancer Soon after Blood > Transfusions [Eureka News Service] > Blood transfusion recipients have a slightly increased risk of cancer in > the months immediately after the transfusion, but this may be due to the > need for blood transfusions in patients with undiagnosed cancer. > Some researchers have speculated that blood transfusions could increase > the recipient's risk of cancer through transmission of biologic agents or > effects on the immune system. To investigate this, Henrik Hjalgrim, M.D., > Ph.D., of Statens Serum Institut in Copenhagen and colleagues identified nearly > 890,000 individuals who were cancer-free when they received blood transfusions > after 1968 in Sweden and Denmark. The researchers tracked the patients to > determine whether they were at increased risk of subsequent cancer. > Among this group, 80,990 cancers were diagnosed, whereas only 55,788 > cancers were expected. During the first six months after a transfusion, > patients had more than a fivefold increase in overall cancer risk compared with the > general population, but after this period, the risk declined rapidly to > levels approaching those of the general population . > " There has been speculation that blood transfusions promote tumor > growth and this could precipitate incipient cancers. However, we speculate that > other mechanisms unrelated to blood transfusion could account for the observed > increased incidence of cancer at early times after blood transfusion, " the > authors write. > ______________________________________________________ > Recurrence Score Assay Predicts Adjuvant Therapy Benefit in Women With > Node-Positive, ER-Positive Breast Cancer > > http://clinicaloptions.com/Oncology/Conference%20Coverage/Breast%20Cancer%20Dec%\ 202007/Tracks/Prognosis/Capsules/10.aspx > According to the results of a study presented at the 2007 San > Breast Cancer Symposium, the Oncotype DX? test may help guide chemotherapy > decisions among women with node-positive, estrogen receptor-positive breast > cancer. > Although chemotherapy is recommended for many women with early-stage > breast cancer, the benefit of chemotherapy varies. Identifying in advance those > women who are most likely to benefit from chemotherapy may allow for more > individualized treatment. This would allow women who are unlikely to benefit > from chemotherapy to avoid the toxic effects of treatment. > Oncotype DX is a genomic test that predicts the likelihood of a cancer > recurrence, the likelihood of benefit from chemotherapy, and the likelihood > of survival in patients with newly diagnosed breast cancer that has not spread > to their lymph nodes (node-negative) and is estrogen receptor (ER)-positive. > Oncotype DX evaluates the activity of 21 genes from a sample of the > patient?s cancer to determine the patient?s Recurrence Score. The Recurrence > Score ranges from 0 to 100, with a higher score indicating a greater risk of > recurrence. > In addition to its established role among women with node-negative > breast cancer, Oncotype DX may also help predict recurrence risk and chemotherapy > benefit among women with node-positive breast cancer. > To explore the use of Oncotype DX among postmenopausal women with > node-positive, ER-positive breast cancer, researchers evaluated information from > a Phase III clinical trial. Information was available for 367 patients; 148 > patients had been treated with tamoxifen alone, and 219 had been treated with > chemotherapy plus tamoxifen. > Forty percent of the study participants were classified as low risk > (Recurrence Score less than 18), 28% were classified as intermediate risk > (Recurrence Score 18-30), and 32% were classified as high-risk (Recurrence Score 31 > or higher). > In the women treated with tamoxifen alone, higher Recurrence Scores > were linked with worse disease-free survival. > Among women with a low Recurrence Score, disease-free and overall > survival were not significantly improved by the addition of chemotherapy. Ten-year > disease-free survival was 60% among women treated with tamoxifen alone and > 64% among women treated with chemotherapy plus tamoxifen. > Among women with a high Recurrence Score, disease-free and overall > survival were significantly improved by the addition of chemotherapy. Ten-year > disease-free survival was 43% among women treated with tamoxifen alone and 55% > among women treated with chemotherapy plus tamoxifen. > These results suggest that Oncotype DX may help guide decisions about > the need for chemotherapy among patients with node-positive, ER-positive > breast cancer. The addition of chemotherapy significantly improved outcomes among > women with a high Recurrence Score. Furthermore, the researchers note: A low > [Recurrence Score] may define a group of women with positive nodes who do not > appear to benefit from anthracyline-based adjuvant chemotherapy. > > Reference: Albain K, Barlow W, Shak S et al. Prognostic and predictive value > of the 21-gene recurrence score assay in postmenopausal, node-positive, > ER-positive breast cancer (S8814,INT0100). Presented at the 30th Annual San > Breast Cancer Symposium. San , TX, December 13-16, 2007. Abstract > #10. > +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > ************************************** See AOL's top rated recipes > (http://food.aol.com/top-rated-recipes?NCID=aoltop00030000000004) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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