health news arrowHome >> Women's Health >> Standard Treatments Gaining Ground in Battle Against Breast Cancer Mon, 23 Nov 2009 GMT 
health news
  NEWS YOU CAN TRUST

Search Health News 
Browser Preferences
 Add to Favorites

Main Menu
 Home
 - - - - - Hot Topics - - - - -
 Bird Flu
 Drug Safety
 Stem Cell Research
 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
 Alternative Medicine
 Children's Health
 Diet & Nutrition
 Disabilities
 *Diseases & Conditions
 Drugs & Herbs
 Environmental Health
 Fitness & Exercise
 Genetic Research
 Health Insurance
 Medical Ethics
 Men's Health
 *Mental Illness
 Pain
 Parenting
 Public Health & Safety
 Senior Care
 *Sexual Health
 Women's Health
 Pregnancy
 World Health
 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
 Web Links
 Contact Us: info@dailynewscentral.com

XML News Feeds


 

HEALTH NEWS

Standard Treatments Gaining Ground in Battle Against Breast Cancer

PDF  Print  E-mail
 13 May, 2005  20:41 GMT

Breast-cancer patients today have a much better chance of getting well, thanks to advances in standard treatments for the disease. While breakthrough drugs continue to make headlines, promising even better prospects ahead, the methods physicians have been employing over the past 15 years have been successful to a much greater degree than expected.

Breast-Cancer Deaths Reduced By Therapies

A large new study is providing good news about long-term survival for women with breast cancer.

Standard chemotherapy and hormone treatment work even better than researchers had expected, the study found. For middle-aged women with an early stage of the disease, combining the treatments can halve the risk of death from breast cancer for at least 15 years.

For instance, a woman younger than 50 with a tumor big enough to feel, but not invading her lymph nodes, would have a 25 percent risk of dying of breast cancer in the next 15 years if she had surgery but no drug therapy. Adding both chemotherapy and hormone treatment would drop her risk to 11.6 percent.

Among the most important findings was that a certain type of chemotherapy, already widely used, was most likely to save lives. It included six months of the drug Adriamycin, also called doxorubicin, or a related drug, epirubicin. Though the drugs cause hair loss and nausea, and in some cases heart problems, in the long run their benefits outweighed the risks, the studies found.

The greatest gains in survival came when the treatment also included five years of tamoxifen, a drug that blocks the effects of the hormone estrogen, which can feed some tumors. But tamoxifen helps only women with estrogen-sensitive tumors, about 60 percent.

"I think women should feel very encouraged by the progress that has been made," said Dr. Sarah Darby of Oxford University, an author of a 30-page report on the work that is being published today in The Lancet, the British medical journal. "Mortality rates are falling in the U.S. and the U.K., and are starting to fall in some other countries."

The study proves that drug therapy deserves credit for the dropping death rates, Darby said.

The findings come from an analysis of 194 studies involving 145,000 women in two dozen countries -- the largest analysis ever of research results in cancer, and also one of the longest, with 15 years of follow-up in many cases. The analysis was paid for by the British government, not drug companies.

Related Articles
Moderate Exercise Improves Breast Cancer Survival (26 May 2005)
Breast Cancer Treatments Work - Death Rate Is Dropping (13 May 2005)
Physical Activity May Extend Breast-Cancer Survival (24 May 2005)
Gender Plays No Role in Breast Cancer Recurrence (22 Jun 2005)
Exercise May Help Breast-Cancer Patients Live Longer (25 May 2005)
More Women Are Beating Breast Cancer (14 May 2005)
 
Sponsored Text Links
InsureMe.com: Click here to get a free health insurance quote.
SkinStore.com: Strivectin SD 6oz Best Price Offer
Hydroderm: Lose wrinkles with Hydroderm
Hydroderm: Body Shape - Proven to be safe and effective - Free Trial!
SkinStore.com: StriVectin-SD