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About 1 in 5 breast
cancer survivors who have completed 5 years of
adjuvant
therapy suffer a recurrence within the 10 years after their
treatment, according to a recent study in the Journal of the
National Cancer Institute.
The study offers women a detailed picture
of how likely they are to face a recurrence further down the road.
Abeena Brewster, MD, and colleagues at the M.D. Anderson
Cancer Center in Houston, Texas looked at the risk of recurrence in
nearly 3,000 women with stage I,
II, and
III breast cancer who were treated at the center from 1985 through
2001. All of the women had neoadjuvant
or adjuvant chemotherapy or
hormonal
therapy.
For the overall group, recurrence rates were 11% at 5 years
and 20% at 10 years after completion of adjuvant therapy.
Brewster and colleagues reported that recurrence risk
increased with higher stage. Five-year recurrence rates were 7%, 11%,
and 13% for women with stages I, II, and II disease, respectively.
Recurrence rates also varied by grade,
which is a description of how the breast cancer cells look under a
microscope. Breast cancer cells are graded on a scale from 1 to 3 –
the higher the grade, the more abnormal the cells look and more likely
they are to grow quickly. Five-year recurrence rates for women with
grades 1, 2, and 3 tumors were 14%, 13%, and 9%, respectively.
The risk of recurrence seemed to be affected by the hormone
receptor status of the cancers, as well. The 5-year recurrence rate was
7% for women with hormone receptor-negative tumors and 13% for those
with hormone receptor-positive disease.
Women with higher grade tumors and those with hormone
receptor-negative cancers tend to have a worse prognosis than those
with lower grade or hormone receptor-positive cancers, so it might seem
surprising that the recurrence risks in these groups were lower in this
study. But this is likely because some women in these groups had
already had recurrences while still being treated, which would have
kept them out of the study.
According to Len Lichtenfeld, MD, American Cancer Society
deputy chief medical officer, "more women with hormone negative and
higher grade cancers may have had very early relapses, and if they made
it through the first 5 years after diagnosis (a time period not
included in this study) they did better in the long term. In other
words, those who did not relapse within 5 years after diagnosis may
have been 'selected' to have a better long-term outlook."
Brewster and colleagues noted some important limitations to
this study. Most of the patients were treated before aromatase
inhibitors were widely used in adjuvant therapy, and before trastuzumab
(Herceptin) was introduced as adjuvant therapy.
According to Dr. Lichtenfeld, this study has a few important
take-home messages.
First, adjuvant therapy does not completely remove the risk of
late cancer recurrence, even for women with low grade/low stage tumors.
And although recent advances in therapy can be expected to reduce the
risk of late recurrence below that reported in this study, clinicians
and patients still need to remain aware of this problem and researchers
need to consider this a high priority for further studies.
For more information, see Detailed
Guide: Breast Cancer.
Citation: "Residual
Risk of Breast Cancer Recurrence 5 Years
After Adjuvant Therapy." Published in the August 12, 2008
online
issue of the
Journal of the National Cancer Institute. First
author: Abeena M. Brewster, MD.
ACS News Center stories are provided as a source of cancer-related
news and are not intended to be used as
press releases.
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