Software to predict risk of breast cancer returning after treatment
14 November 2006
Philadelphia, USA. Doctors have created a computer tool to predict the
risk of breast cancer returning in the same breast over a 10-year period in
women who have had breast conserving surgery to remove only the cancer
(lumpectomy), according to a study presented at the American Society for
Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology’s 48th Annual Meeting in Philadelphia.(1)
“Our tool provides physicians with information regarding the risk of
breast cancer returning in the same breast for any individual patient, which
can then help them evaluate the potential benefit of additional treatments
needed to cure the cancer, including radiation therapy,” said Mona Sanghani,
M.D., lead author of the study and an oncologist at Tufts-New England
Medical Center in Boston. “This predictive tool, however, must be validated
by independent clinical data before it is widely used.”
For patients with early stage breast cancer, the current standard
treatment involves breast conserving surgery followed by radiation therapy
to the breast over a six to eight week period to kill any remaining cancer
cells.
Researchers developed a formula that takes into account all of the risk
factors associated with breast cancer coming back in the same breast after
breast conserving surgery, such as the age of the patient at the time of
treatment, the size and grade of the cancer, if lymphatic vessels are
affected, and the use of chemotherapy or hormone therapy. With the help of a
Web-based computer tool, doctors are able to determine by this formula how
much a patient will be at risk for their cancer returning, along with how
much a patient will benefit from radiation therapy.
For more information on radiation therapy for breast cancer, visit
http://www.rtanswers.org.
1. “Predicting the Risk of Local Recurrence in Patients
with Breast Cancer: An Approach to a New Computer Based Predictive Tool,”
was presented at the American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and
Oncology’s 48th Annual Meeting in Philadelphia on 6 November 2006.
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