Women with mutations in the well-known BRCA1 or
BRCA2 genes who have their breasts and ovaries removed are much
more likely to survive than women who do not get preventive
surgery, U.S. researchers said on Tuesday.
The study shows the benefits of genetic tests that give women with
a family history of cancer the chance to take steps to increase
their chances of survival, they said.
\"This is the first study to prove women survive longer with these
preventive surgeries and shows the importance of genetic testing
when there is a family history of early breast or ovarian cancer,\"
Dr. Virginia Kaklamani of Northwestern University in Chicago wrote
in a commentary about the study published in the Journal of the
American Medical Association.
Women with mutations in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes have a 56 to 84
percent higher risk of developing breast cancer during their
lifetimes.
Those with the BRCA1 mutation also have a 36 to 63 percent higher
risk of ovarian cancer and those with the BRCA2 mutation have a 10
to 27 percent higher risk of ovarian cancer.
Because of this, many women make the difficult choice to have their
breasts or ovaries and fallopian tubes surgically removed to reduce
their risk.
Dr. Susan M. Domchek of the University of Pennsylvania School of
Medicine in Philadelphia and colleagues studied the effectiveness
of these procedures, comparing rates of cancer and death in 2,482
women who had the surgery with those who decided against it in
favor of frequent cancer screenings.
No woman who had a mastectomy developed breast cancer during the
three years of follow-up testing.
Seven percent of women who decided against a mastectomy were
diagnosed with breast cancer in the same period.
\"Our results confirm that risk-reducing mastectomy is associated
with a significant reduction in breast cancer risk,\" Domchek and
colleagues wrote.
Women with BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations who had their ovaries and
fallopian tubes removed had similar results.
About 10 to 20 percent of breast and ovarian cancers are due to
BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes. \"Most of these women will die of ovarian
cancer, so you can save 20 percent of them with the prophylactic
surgery,\" Kaklamani said.
\"And you can save the majority of women who would have died of
their breast cancer,\" she added.
She said primary care physicians, gynecologists and women \"need to
be more aware that these tests exist.\"
Dr. Sandhya Pruthi, a breast cancer expert at the Mayo Clinic in
Rochester, Minnesota, who counsels women with BRCA mutations, said
the study adds more evidence that the surgery can help save lives,
but the choice is never easy.
\"It\'s not cookie-cutter medicine,\" Pruthi, who was not involved in
the study, said in a telephone interview.
She said women need to come to terms with the psychological issues
involved in having their breasts removed, and younger women who
have their ovaries removed must contend with early menopause
symptoms.
\"It\'s not a decision made on a single visit,\" she said.
According to the American Cancer Society and the International
Agency for Research on Cancer, 1.3 million new breast cancer cases
are diagnosed around the world every year and it kills 465,000
women annually, making it the leading global cancer killer of
women.
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