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Saguaro
10-10-2007, 07:16 PM
The widely used chemotherapy drug Taxol does not work for the most common form of breast cancer and helps far fewer patients than has been believed, surprising new research suggests.

If further study bears this out, more than 20,000 women each year in the United States alone might be spared the side effects of this drug or similar ones without significantly raising the risk their cancer will return. That would be roughly half of all breast cancer patients who get chemo now.

"We want to make sure these data are correct before withholding it (Taxol) from some patients ... the stakes are high," said the lead researcher, Dr. Daniel Hayes of the University of Michigan. "On the other hand, we don't want to keep a therapy that doesn't work."

In the study, Taxol did the most good for women who had overactive HER-2 genes _ the target of the newer breast cancer drug Herceptin. These women were about 40 percent less likely to have a recurrence if they received Taxol.

Conversely, Taxol did not significantly help women whose tumors were HER-2 negative and were being helped to grow by estrogen. This is the most common form of the disease.

The differences were revealed by a new analysis of a study done in the 1990s, using modern genetic tools that were not available at that time.

One size doesn't fit all

"The days of 'one size fits all' therapy for patients with breast cancer are coming to an end," Dr. Anne Moore of Weill Cornell Medical College wrote in an editorial accompanying the study in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine.

"Oncologists have a responsibility to their patients to be aware of this report."

The original study involved more than 3,000 women whose cancer had spread to nearby lymph nodes but not widely throughout the body. This is the situation of about one-fourth of the 175,000 women diagnosed with breast cancer in the U.S. each year.

Researchers tested adding paclitaxel, sold as Taxol by New York-based Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. and now also in generic form. They gave it after surgery to remove the cancer and treatment with the chemo drugs Adriamycin and Cytoxan.

Taxol improved survival and became a new standard of care. But the drug frequently causes neurological side effects including numbness and tingling in the hands and feet. In the original study, 18 percent of women had this problem months and even years after taking Taxol.

Even more worrisome has been the growing evidence that some women do not benefit as much from chemo as others. Hayes and other researchers wondered whether that was true in their Taxol study.

Big genetic differences

They retrieved frozen tissue samples from 1,500 of the original participants, did genetic tests to better identify their types of cancer, and discovered big differences in who had responded to the drug.

The study was paid for by grants from the federal government and a breast cancer foundation. Several researchers consult for Bristol-Myers Squibb.

"We should have done this a long time ago," but the tools were lacking and researchers now have the advantage of longer follow-up of these women, said another senior author, Donald Berry. He is biostatistics chief at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center.

Berry is reanalyzing another earlier Taxol study, and Moore urged other scientists to do the same.

With more evidence, "we can begin to use the biology of the cancer to decide whether the chemotherapy will work" before subjecting women to it, Hayes said.

The typical four-cycle treatment with generic paclitaxel costs $7,000 or more, including infusion fees that doctors charge. Insurance typically pays most of this.

For now, many doctors will be reluctant to skip Taxol or other chemo, said Dr. Julie Gralow, a cancer specialist at the University of Washington School of Medicine. Some may fear lawsuits if the cancer recurs and the chemo wasn't given, she said.

"It's just so much easier to give the chemotherapy and know you've been super-aggressive."

However, Kris Miller, a 54-year-old former nurse from Chelsea, Mich., said patients should be given the choice. She has had problems since taking Taxol two years ago for a type of breast cancer that the new research suggests would not respond to the drug.

"Most people recover from it, and I guess I'm one of those unfortunate ones that did not," she said of the side effects. "I have severe numbness and tingling, mostly in my feet. It becomes painful by the end of the day. It never goes away."

"I hope they give people that option," to weigh the risks and benefits and possibly skip Taxol, she said. "If I was going through it now, I would like to have that information."

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21225760/

Kurtz
10-10-2007, 07:41 PM
I know this is good news, but I'm so thankful I don't have to make these kinda decisions in my life.
I admire and respect any woman who has to decipher thru all this kinda data and research to decide the best course of therapy.

Breast cancer runs in my family, I need to call for my mammogram appt. tomorrow.

crazierthanever
10-10-2007, 09:11 PM
Breast cancer runs in my family, I need to call for my mammogram appt. tomorrow.


DO IT!!:sparks

cassandra
10-10-2007, 09:32 PM
I know this is good news, but I'm so thankful I don't have to make these kinda decisions in my life.
I admire and respect any woman who has to decipher thru all this kinda data and research to decide the best course of therapy.

Breast cancer runs in my family, I need to call for my mammogram appt. tomorrow.

Check out my avatar and get on it!!!!!!!!!!! This is a serious matter! :wnude You men need to do it too!:mnudes

Trueblue
10-10-2007, 09:33 PM
Check out my avatar and get on it!!!!!!!!!!! This is a serious matter! :wnude You men need to do it too!:mnudes

:D Nice use of the emoticons, Cass. :D

Kurtz
10-10-2007, 10:01 PM
Check out my avatar and get on it!!!!!!!!!!! This is a serious matter! :wnude You men need to do it too!:mnudes

You're absolutely right!
Here's some info on male breast cancer:
Men's Breast Cancer Info (http://www.imaginis.com/breasthealth/bcmen.asp)

It includes:
Though far less common than in women, it is possible for men to develop breast cancer. The American Cancer Society estimates that about 1,450 new cases of invasive breast cancer are diagnosed in men each year and approximately 470 men die from breast cancer annually. Male breast cancers account for approximately 1% of all breast cancer cases.

Main Menu

Symptoms and Types of Male Breast Abnormalities
Risk Factors for Male Breast Cancer
Diagnosing Male Breast Cancer
Treating Male Breast Cancer
Survival Rates for Male Breast Cancer
Additional Resources and References
Symptoms and Types of Male Breast Abnormalities

While most male breast changes are due to benign (non-cancerous) abnormalities, such as gynecomastia (non-cancerous tissue growth), men should report any persistent breast changes to their physicians for clinical evaluation. Symptoms of male breast cancer may include a breast lump, swelling, skin dimpling or puckering, nipple retraction (the nipple turns inward), redness or scaling of the nipple or breast skin, and nipple discharge.

Saguaro
10-10-2007, 10:10 PM
Just how many men would do what they need to do ? Most men consider it a woman's disease . Very sad

cassandra
10-10-2007, 10:13 PM
Just how many men would do what they need to do ? Most men consider it a woman's disease . Very sad

Agree!

How Serious Is Breast Cancer In Men?
Doctors used to think that breast cancer in men was a more severe disease than it was in women, but it now seems that for comparably advanced breast cancers, men and women have similar outcomes.

The major problem is that breast cancer in men is often diagnosed later than breast cancer in women. This may be because men are less likely to be suspicious of an abnormality in that area. In addition, their small amount of breast tissue is harder to feel -- making it more difficult to catch these cancers early, and allowing tumors to spread more quickly to the surrounding tissues.
http://www.webmd.com/breast-cancer/guide/breast-cancer-men

Semantics
10-10-2007, 10:20 PM
Male or female, statistics on breast cancer are very alarming.

I'm glad that science is getting somewhere. :clap

Oceanbreeze
10-10-2007, 11:01 PM
I know this is good news, but I'm so thankful I don't have to make these kinda decisions in my life.
I admire and respect any woman who has to decipher thru all this kinda data and research to decide the best course of therapy.

Breast cancer runs in my family, I need to call for my mammogram appt. tomorrow.

Breast cancer also runs in my family, I have been getting yearly mamos since I turned 35. My results should be back by Halloween.

My best friend has breast cancer right now. :sad

Trueblue
10-12-2007, 05:38 PM
Breast cancer also runs in my family, I have been getting yearly mamos since I turned 35. My results should be back by Halloween.

My best friend has breast cancer right now. :sad

I'm sorry to hear that.