> > Reuters 03-01-05
> > Chicago(Reuters)
> > Women 65 and older with breast cancer should consider chemotherapy even
> > though doctors have been reluctant to use it in that age group because
of
> > its side effects, a study said on Tuesday.
> > Doctors at the Vermont Cancer Center in Burlington analyzed cases
between
> > 1975 and 1999 and found that "healthy" older patients are likely to
derive
> > similar treatment benefits as younger patients from chemotherapy.
> > The older group had the lowering of their relapse rate and the same
> lowering
> > of their mortality rate, by being on a higher dose therapy. This was
> similar
> > to younger patients, said Hyman Muss, a doctor who headed the study.
> > The study published in this week's Journal of American Medical
> Association,
> > said that nearly half of all new breast cancers in the United States
occur
> > in women 65 or older.
> > But data,it said, suggests that chemotherapy may be underused in older
> > patients or done at reduced doses that decrease its effectiveness
because
> of
> > reactions that can leave patients weak, exhausted and nauseous.
> > "I would recommmend that for older breast cancer patients...they ask
their
> > physicians about the opportunities to receive chemotherapy that might be
> > helpful to them."Muss said.
J - 03 Mar 2005 10:25 GMT
> > > Reuters 03-01-05
> > > Chicago(Reuters)
[quoted text clipped - 23 lines]
> > > physicians about the opportunities to receive chemotherapy that might be
> > > helpful to them."Muss said.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,149213,00.html
Chemo Benefits Elderly Women With Breast Cancer
Wednesday, March 02, 2005
By Jennifer Warner
Age alone shouldnt be a factor in determining whether a woman should be offered
chemotherapy as part of her breast cancer treatment, according to a new study.
Researchers say the incidence of breast cancer increases with age, and almost
half of all new breast cancers in the U.S. are diagnosed in women aged 65 or
over.
Chemotherapy (search) after surgery has been shown to reduce the risk of relapse
and death in women aged 50 to 69 with early-stage breast cancer. Yet few studies
have looked at the benefits and risks of chemotherapy in breast cancer treatment
among women 70 and over. Early-stage breast cancer is cancer that has not spread
beyond the breast and lymph nodes (search) under the arms. Chemotherapy is used
after surgery for early-stage breast cancer to eliminate cancer cells that may
still exist.
In this study, researchers found that women 65 and over received the same
benefits in preventing breast cancer recurrence and reducing the risk of death
due to breast cancer as younger women. Older women did have a higher risk of
death, but the study showed the risk was due to other causes than breast cancer.
Researchers say studies exploring new approaches in using chemotherapy as a
secondary treatment for breast cancer are now in progress, and these results
suggest that older women with early breast cancer who are in otherwise good
health but at high risk of recurrence should be allowed to participate in these
studies.
Older Women Benefit From Chemo, Too
In the study, which appears in the March 2 issue of The Journal of the American
Medical Association, researchers analyzed information from studies on the use of
chemotherapy as a secondary treatment for women with breast cancer that had
spread to the lymph nodes. The studies were conducted between 1975 and 1999.
A total of 6,487 women with breast cancer were included in these studies,
including 542 who were aged 65 or older and 159 who were 70 or over.
The results showed that there was no relationship between a woman's age and
living without a return of her breast cancer among the women who received
chemotherapy after surgery for breast cancer. Older and younger women appeared
to share similar benefits from chemotherapy in terms of preventing disease and
reducing the risk of breast cancer death.
The risk of death due to any cause was significantly higher among women aged 65
or older, but this additional risk was attributed to causes other than breast
cancer.
Overall, 33 deaths (0.5 percent of all patients) were attributed to the
chemotherapy treatment, and older women had higher rates of treatment-related
deaths than younger women.
Our study adds to the increasing number of trials that suggest that older
patients in fair to good health tolerate standard chemotherapy regimens, and
even more intensive regimens, almost as well as younger patients," write
researcher Hyman B. Muss, MD, of the Vermont Cancer Center in Burlington, Vt.,
and colleagues. "A sobering finding from this analysis is the observation that
only 8 percent of patients entered in the trials analyzed in this study were
aged 65 years or older; about 50 percent of new breast cancer diagnoses occur in
women in the older age group."
In an editorial that accompanies the study, William J. Gradishar, MD, and
Virginia G. Kaklamani, MD, DSc, of the Feinberg School of Medicine at
Northwestern University, say its clear that adding chemotherapy after surgery
in the treatment of early-stage breast cancer clearly reduces the risk of
disease relapse and breast cancer death.
But they say very few older women have been included in clinical trials of
chemotherapy as a secondary breast cancer treatment, and this lack of data is
the result of physician bias based on the notion that older patients will not
benefit from [secondary] chemotherapy, will not tolerate it as well as younger
patients, or both.
The editorialists say it will be up to the doctor, in consultation with the
patient and family, to discuss the potential benefits and risks of secondary
chemotherapy in breast cancer treatment in older women, a group for whom both
the length and quality of life can be threatened by a variety of other issues.
By Jennifer Warner, reviewed by Brunilda Nazario, MD
SOURCE: Muss, H. The Journal of the American Medical Association, March 2, 2005;
vol 293: pp 1073-1081.
[end article]
Regarding experimental or clinical trials, please read the posts and documents
posted here. http://tinyurl.com/5ywb2
and http://www.cancerhelp.org.uk/help/default.asp?page=73
and http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/
J