Overcoming cancer?

The cancer cells are not from outside the body but are cells of body itself over which body has lost control and they have become autonomous and are repeatedly dividing and growing. Various known and unknown, intrinsic and extrinsic factors affect this process. Scientific and technological advancement is providing more and more insight on the processes involved in the development of cancer. Similarly new ways and approaches of tackling the cancer have also evolved. New drugs and therapies are being launced every day to try to control this dreaded disease. Still the main treatment revolves arou...

Prostate cancer - Heart Disease.

A recently published article has revealed the very  important fact that the use of hormonal treatment for early prostate cancer increases the risk of heart disease. The risk is maximum with GnRH agonists or orchiectomy and least with antiandrogens. This finding is very important since patients with early disease  otherwise have  good overall survival.   Details A Swedish study presented in an international conference on September 22nd 2009 revealed some important facts regarding prostate cancer and hormonal therapy. The risk of heart disease is increased by all hormonal therapies...

What Is Cancer?

All cancers begin when cells in a part of the body become abnormal and start making more cells. These extra cells form a mass of tissue called a growth or tumor. If the tumor gets bigger, it can hurt nearby tissues and organs. Cancer cells  can also  break away and spread to other parts of the body. What is cancer ? Cells are the smallest structural unit of human body. Cells come together and form tissues and tissues come together and form organs. Specific organs have specific functions and together form the human body. Inside the human body, wear and tear is a continuous process. Old...

Breast Cancer

Surgery of the primary lesion in patients with breast cancer having metastatic disease improves survival. A new retrospective study reveals that surgery  increases the medial survival from 14 months to 31 months. The doubling of median survival in this subgroup of patients is a very significant finding which now needs to be confirmed in larger phase III study. DETAILS Surgical removal of the primary tumor in metastatic breast cancer improves survival. This was revealed in a study presented in the 15th Congress of the European Cancer Organization (ECCO 15) and the 34th European Society ...

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Surgery of the primary lesion in patients with breast cancer having metastatic disease improves survival. A new retrospective study reveals that surgery  increases the medial survival from 14 months to 31 months. The doubling of median survival in this subgroup of patients is a very significant finding which now needs to be confirmed in larger phase III study.


DETAILS


Surgical removal of the primary tumor in metastatic breast cancer improves survival. This was revealed in a study presented in the 15th Congress of the European Cancer Organization (ECCO 15) and the 34th European Society for Medical Oncology (34th ESMO) Multidisciplinary Congress: Abstract 5005. September 21, 2009. The author of the study,  Jetske Ruiterkamp, MD, said that removal of the tumor was associated with doubling of survival time.

Patients who underwent surgery had substantially longer median survival compared to the patients treated non surgically (31 months vs 14 months). The 5 year survival was 24.5% in surgery group vs 13.1% in non surgical group. This is a retrospective study done in Netherlands where 1 of 9 women are diagnosed with breast cancer, and of this population, 3% to 10% patients present with distant metastases at the time of their diagnosis. Among 15,769 women who were diagnosed with breast cancer in the south of the Netherlands between 1993 and 2004, 728 patients had distant metastases at their initial diagnosis. They represent 5% of all breast cancer patients in that region of the country. Approximately 40% of the patients with advanced-stage disease had undergone surgical removal of the primary tumor. There are two reasons for which  a primary lesion is removed in a patient with metastatic disease. One is that the tumor is causing symptoms and the second is the patient's desire for surgery. Usually when  women are doing well, they would like their tumour excised.

In the analysis conducted by the researchers patients were stratified  in subgroups defined by age, tumor stage, period of diagnosis, comorbidity, number of metastatic sites, use of locoregional radiotherapy and use of systemic treatment. The multivariate analysis revealed surgery to be an independent prognostic factor for overall survival.

The most probable explanation for this result is that the primary tumor may be releasing  cancer cells into the circulation and with surgery this source for cancer cells is removed. These findings are very interesting and important but as this is a retrospective study, randomized clinical trials are needed for conclusive evidence.

 

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