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Patient
Management: Quality of life and beyond
Newswise — Breast cancer is a multifaceted
disease requiring creative solutions for
diagnosis, quality of life management and
adjuvant therapies. Data presented at the
CTRC-AACR San Antonio Breast Cancer
Symposium explore these areas.
Although hormone supplements have been
implicated in increased rates of breast
cancer, they appear to mitigate the
mortality risk of breast cancers that do
develop.
Compared with women who did not use hormone
therapy, women who took estrogen-progestin
were 63 percent less likely to die from
breast cancer while those who took estrogen
alone were 30 percent less likely.
Tamoxifen Tops
Anastrazole for Quality of Life, but not
Survival
Abstract #1136, Shozo Ohsumi, M.D., Ph.D.
After one to four years of tamoxifen,
switching to anastrozole improves
disease-free survival by about 31 percent,
but patients pay a price in quality of life
measures. The difference in quality of life
is significant enough that scientists say it
should be considered, and may even be the
deciding factor, when making a clinical
decision about therapeutic strategy.
Full release available/Complete data to be
presented at the meeting.
Letrozole following breast cancer surgery
may provide survival benefit
Abstract #13, Alan Coates, M.D.
Letrozole may improve overall survival in
patients with primary breast cancer. A
four-arm comparison study of letrozole and
tamoxifen shows letrozole not only reduces
recurrence, but may provide a 13 percent
reduction in risk of death. Additionally,
the study finds that using a sequence of
tamoxifen and letrozole is not superior to
letrozole alone. The sequence of letrozole
followed by tamoxifen was closely similar to
letrozole alone implying that patients can
safely switch to tamoxifen after initial
letrozole if required.
Complete data to be presented at the
meeting.
Use of Written Forms
Doubles Breast Cancer Detection Rate
Abstract #5012, William Goodson, M.D.
When clinicians used simple written forms to
focus attention during clinical breast
exams, the rate of breast mass detection
from the previous year doubled without
retraining clinicians, thus affirming the
importance of clinician attentiveness.
This finding, researchers say, can be
applied to all aspects of medicine and
undermines the need for intensive training,
complicated techniques, and medical
reimbursement codes to improve this simple,
yet valuable procedure.
Complete data to be presented at the
meeting.
The mission of the CTRC-AACR San Antonio
Breast Cancer Symposium is to produce a
unique and comprehensive scientific meeting
that encompasses the full spectrum of breast
cancer research, facilitating the rapid
translation of new knowledge into better
care for breast cancer patients.
The Cancer Therapy & Research Center (CTRC)
at The University of Texas Health Science
Center at San Antonio, the American
Association for Cancer Research (AACR), and
Baylor College of Medicine are joint
sponsors of the San Antonio Breast Cancer
Symposium.
This collaboration utilizes the clinical
strengths of the CTRC and Baylor, and the
AACR’s scientific prestige in basic,
translational and clinical cancer research
to expedite the delivery of the latest
scientific advances into the clinic. The
31st Annual Symposium is expected to draw
more than 8,500 participants from more than
80 countries.
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