Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: cancer + breast + women  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

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Siemens Unveils MR Oncology Applications and Dedicated Breast ...
International Business Times, NY - Nov 30, 2008
Breast cancer is the most frequently diagnosed cancer in women. In 2007,1.3 million cases were diagnosed and 465000 women died worldwide(*2). ...
Radioactive 'Seed' Rx Helps Women With Implants Fight Breast Cancer
U.S. News & World Report, DC - 57 minutes ago
1 (HealthDay News) -- Women who have had their breasts augmented with implants and are later diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer may be treated ...
Breast Cancer Treatment Offers Better Outcome to Women with Implants
MarketWatch -
CHICAGO, Dec 01, 2008 /PRNewswire-USNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Women with early-stage breast cancer who have undergone breast augmentation may be treated ...

ABC News
Study suggests some breast cancers may naturally regress
Cancer Research UK - News & Resources, UK -
Research published in the Archives of Internal Medicine looked at rates of breast cancer among 119472 women between the ages of 50 and 64, all of whom were ...
New local test detecting breast cancer earlier TMCnet
Some breast cancers just go away, researchers say Los Angeles Times
Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is associazione LUIMO
Chicago Tribune - Washington Post
all 276 news articles »
Researchers Use Affymetrix Technology to Discover Why Some Breast ...
MarketWatch -
Most women have breast cancers that are stimulated to grow by estrogen, but not all. Breast cancer is the most common cancer among American women. ...AFFX
Health Buzz: World AIDS Day and Other Health News
U.S. News & World Report, DC -
Breast cancer researchers have questioned the value of the screening test in women younger than 50 and berated the X-ray for its high rate of false ...

HealthNewsDigest.com
One in Five Older Women With Early Breast Cancer Experience ...
HealthNewsDigest.com, NY - 31 minutes ago
Of these women, those with Stage 1 breast cancer had worse health outcomes associated with this less-than-ideal therapy, while those with a precancerous ...
Eating eggs when pregnant affects breast cancer in offspring
EurekAlert (press release), DC -
For example, the slow growing tumors in rats had a genetic pattern similar to those seen in breast cancers of women who are considered to have a good ...

ABC News
New Cases of Cancer Decline in the US
New York Times, United States - Nov 26, 2008
Breast cancer incidence rates decreased by 2.2 percent annually from 1999 to 2005, for example, a drop some researchers attributed to large numbers of women ...
New Canadian Campaign Promotes At Home Colorectal Cancer Tests eFluxMedia
Women Smokers Lose 14.5 Years Off Life Span Washington Post
Other cancers need spotlight Dallas Morning News
Bloomberg - Houston Chronicle
all 521 news articles »
Coffee Family Services wants one million women
The Enterprise Ledger, AL -
The Love/Avon Army of Women program is seeking to recruit one million women across the country to help researchers learn what causes breast cancer and move ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: women + cancer + breast  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)


Ottawa Citizen
Sex After Breast Cancer
U.S. News & World Report, DC - 24 minutes ago
While communication is certainly important in dealing with breast cancer, or any cancer for that matter, far too many women have a difficult time talking ...
AssociatedPress
Breast MRI Helps Diagnose Christina Applegate's Breast Cancer KLAS-TV
Five Breast Cancer Myths FOXNews
Associated Content - Health24.com
all 995 news articles »

Los Angeles Times
Breast cancer: What you need to know
Food Consumer, IL -
Herbal Compound Indirubin Derivatives Kill Cancer Cells. Moderate exercise: Women with breast cancer can drastically increase their odds of survival if they ...
The emotional side of breast cancer and its treatments Gather.com
Breast cancer diagnosis ... and the outcome Los Angeles Times
all 4 news articles »

U.S. News & World Report
Health Buzz: Prostate Cancer Screening and Other Health News
U.S. News & World Report, DC -
For this reason, the test is recommended only for those at increased risk of breast cancer. Last year, Katherine Hobson explained that women at high risk of ...
Orange County Set to Race for the Cure(R)
MarketWatch -
One in eight women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in her lifetime. With nearly 1900 women in Orange County facing a diagnosis of breast cancer this ...
Shannon Koehle: Are Divorce Rates Higher Among Women With Breast ...
EmpowHer, AZ - 28 minutes ago
?Divorce rates are not higher among couples in which a woman has had breast cancer,? they say. Similarly, they report just as many women leave husbands who ...
UA study: Woman's bone density may predict breast cancer risk
Tucson Citizen, AZ -
Bone density screenings, most commonly used to detect osteoporosis, may also be helpful in determining a woman's risk for developing breast cancer, ...

TopNews
Many Cancer Patients Turn to Complementary Medicine
U.S. News & World Report, DC - Aug 4, 2008
"This is not only because ovarian cancer is obviously limited to women and breast cancer is extremely rare among men. For example, all types of ...
American Cancer Society Survey: Cancer Survivors Use Complementary ... TopNews
Complementary methods used extensively by cancer survivors HealthJockey.com
High Use Of Complementary Methods Found Among Cancer Survivors Science Daily (press release)
all 34 news articles »
121 women undergo mammography test in Temeke District
IPPmedia, United Republic of Tanzania -
By Correspondent Zuwena Shame At least 121 women in Temeke municipality appeared in the breast cancer screening campaign which took place at Temeke Hospital ...
Munchkin, Inc. Reminds Women Everywhere ?Don?t Duck a Breast Exam ...
Business Wire (press release), CA -
(BUSINESS WIRE)--In an effort to spotlight early breast cancer detection and remind women everywhere, ?don?t duck a breast exam,? Munchkin, Inc., ...
Early screening is crucial to improving recovery rates for breast ...
Orlando Sentinel, FL -
"One in eight women develops breast cancer by the age of 80." While obesity, alcohol intake and hormone-replacement therapy all have been linked to breast ...
Source: Google News

Breast cancer and hormone-replacement therapy: the Million Women Study -
V Beral, E Banks, G Reeves, D Bull - The Lancet, 2003 - Elsevier
... For example, the suggested survival analyses among women with breast cancer cannot
answer the question we set out to address-whether use of HRT increases death ...

The effect of raloxifene on risk of breast cancer in postmenopausal women -
SR Cummings, S Eckert, KA Krueger, D Grady, TJ … - feedback, 2005 - biomedcentral.com
... Paper Report. The effect of raloxifene on risk of breast cancer in postmenopausal
women SR Cummings, S Eckert, KA Krueger, D Grady, TJ Powles, JA Cauley, L ...

… for prevention of breast cancer: report of the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project … -
B Fisher - J Natl Cancer I, 1998 - jnci.oxfordjournals.org
... Home page, J. Clin. Oncol. Home page AJ Chien and PE Goss Aromatase inhibitors
and bone health in women with breast cancer. J. Clin. ...

… anti-HER2 monoclonal antibody in women who have HER2-overexpressing metastatic breast cancer that … -
MA Cobleigh, CL Vogel, D Tripathy - feedback, 2005 - biomedcentral.com
... has been subsequently developed which in phase II trials has demonstrated safety
and clinical activity in women with overexpressing metastatic breast cancer. ...

Gene expression profiling predicts clinical outcome of breast cancer -
LJ van't Veer, H Dai, MJ van de Vijver, YD He, AAM … - Nature, 2002 - Mass Med Soc
... technology potentially can improve prognostic predictions -- and, hence, appropriate
use of adjuvant therapy -- in relatively young women with breast cancer. ...

Risk factors for breast cancer in women with proliferative breast disease. -
WD Dupont, DL Page - N Engl J Med, 1985 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
N Engl J Med. 1985 Jan 17;312(3):146-51. Risk factors for breast cancer in
women with proliferative breast disease. Dupont WD, Page DL. ...

Adjuvant Radiotherapy and Chemotherapy in Node-Positive Premenopausal Women with Breast Cancer -
J Ragaz, SM Jackson, N Le, IH Plenderleith, JJ … - New England Journal of Medicine, 1997 - content.nejm.org
Original Article from The New England Journal of Medicine -- Adjuvant Radiotherapy
and Chemotherapy in Node-Positive Premenopausal Women with Breast Cancer. ...

The use of Estrogens and Progestins and the Risk of Breast Cancer in Postmenopausal Women. -
GA Colditz, SE Hankinson, DJ Hunter, WC Willet, … - Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 1995 - obgynsurvey.com
... The use of Estrogens and Progestins and the Risk of Breast Cancer in Postmenopausal
Women. ... Overall, breast cancer causes about 4 percent of deaths in women. ...

… plus a Monoclonal Antibody against HER2 for Metastatic Breast Cancer That Overexpresses HER2 -
DJ Slamon, B Leyland-Jones, S Shak, H Fuchs, V … - New England Journal of Medicine, 2001 - content.nejm.org
... We evaluated the efficacy and safety of trastuzumab, a recombinant monoclonal antibody
against HER2, in women with metastatic breast cancer that overexpressed ...

Prevention of breast cancer with tamoxifen: preliminary findings from the Italian randomised trial … -
U Veronesi, P Maisonneuve, A Costa, V Sacchini, C … - Lancet, 1998 - Mass Med Soc
... An Italian double-blind, placebo-controlled trial enrolled 5,408 women
without breast cancer who had had a hysterectomy. (These ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Tamoxifen Doesn't Extend Life for Most Women at High Risk for Breast Cancer

  MONDAY, July 24 (HealthDay News) -- Women at risk for breast cancer or breast cancer recurrence are routinely prescribed tamoxifen to help lower that risk, but a new study suggests the drug will not boost the life expectancy of many women who take it.

Specifically, women at high risk for breast cancer but without any prior history of the disease may not benefit from use of the drug in terms of extended life span, researchers found.

They also found the drug to be extraordinarily expensive from a public policy point of view, costing up to $1.3 million per year of life saved.

"If someone was on the lower end of the risk threshold, I would say the benefits of taking tamoxifen in terms of mortality are not there," said lead researcher Dr. Joy Melnikow, professor of family and community medicine at the University of California Davis, Sacramento.

Her team published its findings Monday in the Sept. 1 issue of the journal Cancer.

First approved in 1998 by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to help prevent breast cancer in women at high risk for the disease, "Tamoxifen [brand named Nolvadex] has been around a long time," Melnikow explained.

 

The drug works by interfering with the activity of the hormone estrogen, thus reducing the chances of developing breast cancer. The FDA's approval for preventive use was aimed at women with at least a 1.67 percent chance of developing the disease over the next five years -- the threshold for "high risk." The average 60-year-old white woman carries this level of risk, Melnikow said.

The new analysis tackled an as yet unanswered question: Whether tamoxifen does, in fact, lower death rates for high-risk women who take it to prevent breast cancer.

To calculate the drug's effectiveness, Melnikow's team developed a mathematical model that followed a hypothetical group of 50-year-old women to an endpoint of death or 100 years of age.

The researchers reported that tamoxifen would only extend life expectancy when a woman's five-year risk of developing breast cancer reaches about 3 percent or more.

"If women are near that threshold [of 1.67 percent], at the lower end of the high-risk range, the effect of tamoxifen on mortality from breast cancer and overall [causes] was extremely small or negligible," Melnikow said.

And tamoxifen is not without its own level of risk. While reducing the chance that a woman at high risk will get breast cancer, the drug can also increase her risk of developing endometrial cancer, cataracts and blood clots.

Melnikow emphasized that the new analysis is only looking at death rates in women at high risk of breast cancer who do not have it -- not for women with a prior history of the disease.

 
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"We know in women who have had breast cancer and have hormone-positive [tumors], taking tamoxifen improves their survival," Melnikow said. And, she added, it's well known that tamoxifen reduces breast cancer recurrence in women who had breast cancer by 47 percent with five years of treatment. "It's also been proved to reduce the incidence of breast cancer in women at high risk" by about 49 percent, she said.

However, "We took into consideration the fact that the breast cancers that are prevented by tamoxifen are mostly hormone receptor-positive cancer, and those cancers actually have a better prognosis than hormone-receptor negative cancers," Melnikow explained.

In other words, even though the drug may help prevent many cases of more curable hormone receptor-positive cancers, it is not effective in protecting against more deadly receptor-negative tumors. Added to that is the raised risk for endometrial cancer and blood clots among women taking tamoxifen. The end result is no difference in mortality for many high-risk women using the drug, the researchers concluded.

Meanwhile, the mathematical model found that the drug cost as much as $1.3 million per year of life saved, based on the U.S. price of the drug. That's a concern not only for public policy makers, she said, but also for individual women. For example, a patient living in the Sacramento area can expect to pay between $240 and $1,500 per year for tamoxifen.

The bottom line: "For most women, they don't think it is going to help improve survival," said Dr. Herman Kattlove, medical editor for the American Cancer Society who is familiar with the analysis. "If you are in the [high range] of the high-risk group, it may help survival. But 'may' is the operative word." The drug does decrease the chance of getting breast cancer, he added.

"Risk does matter," stressed Dr. Christy Russell, associate professor of medicine at the University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine, Los Angeles, and an American Cancer Society spokeswoman. "Women at the higher [end of] the risk range are more likely to benefit from the tamoxifen, in terms of reducing their risk of dying prematurely from breast cancer," she said.

And even among lower-risk women, she said, "It would be more acceptable to use tamoxifen if she had no uterus, because a lot of the concern about potential deaths revolved around uterine cancer."

More information

There's help with calculating breast cancer risk at the U.S. National Cancer Institute.

 

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