A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, November 10, 2017
Breast cancer 'can return 15 years after treatment ends'
9 November 2017
Breast cancer can resurface after remaining dormant for 15 years following successful treatment, a study has found.
Women with large tumours and cancer that had spread to the lymph nodes had the highest 40% risk of it coming back.
Researchers writing in the New England Journal of Medicine said
extending treatment with hormone therapy could reduce the risk of it
recurring.
Scientists analysed the progress of 63,000 women for 20 years.
All had the most common form of breast cancer.
This is a type fuelled by the hormone oestrogen which can stimulate cancer cells to grow and divide.
Every patient received treatments such as tamoxifen or aromatase
inhibitors which block the effects of oestrogen or shut off the
hormone's supply.
Although after five years of treatment their cancers had gone, over the
next 15 years a steady number of women found that their cancer spread
throughout their body - some up to 20 years after diagnosis.
Women who originally had large tumours and cancer that had spread to
four or more lymph nodes were at highest risk of the cancer returning
the next 15 years, the study said.
Women with small, low-grade cancers and no spread to the lymph nodes had a much lower 10% risk of cancer spread over that time.
'Remarkable'
Lead researcher Dr Hongchao Pan, from University of Oxford, said: "It is
remarkable that breast cancer can remain dormant for so long and then
spread many years later, with this risk remaining the same year after
year and still strongly related to the size of the original cancer and
whether it had spread to the (lymph) nodes."
Doctors have long known that five years of tamoxifen reduces the risk of
recurrence by about a third in the five years after stopping treatment.
Recent research has suggested that extending hormone therapy to 10 years
may be more effective at preventing breast cancer recurrence and death.
SCIENCE LIBRARY-
Aromatase inhibitors, which only work for post-menopausal women, are believed to be even more effective.
But there are side effects with hormone treatments which can affect
patients' quality of life and cause them to stop taking the pills.
These include menopausal symptoms, osteporosis, joint pain and carpal tunnel syndrome.
Prof Arnie Purushotham, senior clinical adviser at Cancer Research UK,
which funded the study, said that since the research began, new drugs
had been used to treat breast cancer and those worked in different ways
to tamoxifen.
He said: "It's vital that work continues to better predict which cancers might return.
"We also need to know what the difference for women might be in taking
hormone therapies for 10 years instead of five, the side effects and how
this affects patients' quality of life."
Sally Greenbook, from charity Breast Cancer Now, said it was essential
that women discussed any changes in treatment with their doctor.
"We would urge all women who have had treatment for breast cancer not to
be alarmed, but to ensure they are aware of the signs of recurrence and
of metastatic breast cancer, and to speak to their GP or breast care
team if they have any concerns."