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Irradiated Breast Cancer Patients May Need Monitoring
For
Esophageal Cancer
NEW YORK, NY -- January 22, 1998 -- Radiation treatment
for
breast cancer raises slightly a woman's long-term risk for
esophageal cancer, according to a study by
epidemiologists
at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center in the Annals of
Internal Medicine.
The findings do not imply that patients should avoid
lumpectomy and radiation, the standard therapy for
early-stage breast cancer, according to the authors.
The results suggest physicians should be especially alert
to
symptoms suggestive of esophageal cancer in patients who
have received radiation treatment, said the principal
investigator, Habibul Ahsan, MD, MMedSc, assistant
professor
of clinical public health at the Columbia School of Public
Health at Columbia-Presbyterian.
This is particularly
important for patients who smoke cigarettes or drink
alcohol, the two major risk factors for esophageal cancer.
The study was conducted by examining the records of more
than 220,000 breast cancer patients diagnosed between
1973
and 1993.
The group included both patients who received
radiation therapy and those who did not. Ten or more years
after diagnosis, irradiated patients were roughly four to
five times more likely to develop esophageal cancer than
non-irradiated patients or women in the general
population,
according to Ahsan and his co-investigator, Alfred
Neugut,
MD, PhD, associate professor of clinical medicine and
public
health at Columbia-Presbyterian. This is the first study
to
link radiation therapy for breast cancer with an
increased
risk for esophageal cancer.
In an earlier study, the researchers demonstrated that
breast-cancer irradiation raises one's risk for lung
cancer.
The risk was substantially higher among patients who
smoked.
The same pattern may hold true with esophageal cancer,
Neugut said.
"In the lung cancer study, the effect of smoking turned
out
to be multiplicative. That is, you ended up with 40 times
the risk if you were both a smoker and had radiation
therapy,” Neugut said. “With esophageal cancer, the
combined
effect of irradiation and smoking may turn out to be even
more dramatic. We don't know that yet. We're just
starting a
study that will give us some answers in a couple of
years."
The researchers also plan to analyse the effect of
radiation
dosage, alcohol consumption, and body mass index on the
incidence of esophageal cancer.
"Because survival among women with breast cancer is
gradually increasing, we believe that clinicians should
be
aware of the possibility of a second cancer in the
esophagus
should suspicious symptoms arise among long-term
survivors,
particularly those who received radiation therapy in the
past and who smoke cigarettes or drink alcohol," the
authors
concluded.
The primary symptoms of esophageal cancer are difficulty
swallowing and pain with swallowing.
"The actual absolute risk for esophageal cancer, even
among
irradiated women, is still trivial," Neugut said.
"Esophageal cancer occurs in about one out of every 2,000
women with breast cancer, so we certainly don't want to
imply that women shouldn't get radiation therapy.
Radiation
therapy improves survival after breast cancer and that
should be the first consideration."
Thanks most likely to Reuters Health (sorry we lost the reference).
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