
September
3, 2004
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Radiation after
lumpectomy may be unnecessary for some older women
Older women treated with the drug tamoxifen after lumpectomy to remove
early-stage breast cancer may safely be able to avoid radiation therapy
and its unpleasant side effects. An MGH-led study in the Sept. 2 issue
of The New England Journal of Medicine reports that adding radiation to
post-surgical tamoxifen treatment of women age 70 or older has minimal
impact on the risk of local tumor recurrence and does not improve survival.
"If a patient does not need to have radiation therapy, her quality
of life can improve significantly," says Kevin Hughes, MD, of the
MGH Cancer Center, who led the study.
Most older breast cancer patients have tumors that can be treated with
tamoxifen, which blocks the interaction between estrogen and its receptor
protein. Radiation therapy reduces the recurrence of tumors, but breast
cancer is less likely to recur in older women. Therefore the researchers
investigated whether such patients might do well if they receive tamoxifen
alone after surgery.
The five-year study followed 600 women, age 70 or older, with the type
of breast cancer treated with tamoxifen. After their tumors were removed
by lumpectomy, half the participants received the drug alone and the others
received tamoxifen and radiation. Both groups had very low rates of recurrence,
with a slightly higher risk in the tamoxifen-only group, but there were
no significant differences in terms of distant metastasis, the need for
eventual mastectomy or in overall survival. In addition, those receiving
radiation had significantly more side effects.
"Each woman and her physician should choose a treatment plan by weighing
the slightly increased local recurrence risk against the virtually certain
costs of radiation the patient's time, adverse effects and financial
costs," says Hughes.
Barbara Smith, MD, PhD, program director for breast cancer at the Gillette
Center for Women's Cancers at the MGH, is a co-author of the study.
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