Chemotherapy Improves Long-Term Node-Negative Breast Cancer Survival
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Chemotherapy Improves Long-Term Node-Negative Breast Cancer Survival

LONDON, ENGLAND -- Sept. 18, 1998 -- New findings published in the current issue of The Lancet show that treating breast cancer with cell-killing drugs (chemotherapy) improves long-term survival even if the cancer has not already spread to the local lymph glands.

These benefits of chemotherapy are substantial for women aged under 50 at diagnosis, but survival is also improved for women in their 50s and 60s.

Even after successful surgery, breast cancer cells may remain undetected in the body. There are two main ways of treating these. One is hormonal therapy: for example, tamoxifen can be used to block hormone receptors on the cancer cells and so interfere with their growth. The other way is to use chemotherapy.

In the largest ever randomised study of chemotherapy for cancer, an international collaboration organised by the Imperial Cancer Research Fund's Clinical Trial Service Unit at Oxford University, followed 18,000 women with breast cancer.

Among women aged under 50 whose cancer had already spread to the local lymph glands at the time of surgery (node-positive), some months of chemotherapy typically prevented about 11 deaths during the next 10 years for every 100 women treated. But, among younger women with no evidence of disease spread, the benefits of chemotherapy were also substantial -- about seven fewer deaths per 100 treated.

Chemotherapy produced a small, but real, improvement in survival -- of about two to three lives saved per 100 -- for women in their 50s and 60s whose cancer was either node-positive or node-negative.

"We already knew that chemotherapy improves the chances of survival for a young woman with breast cancer which has spread to the local lymph glands," said professor Rory Collins from Oxford University. "Now we know that this treatment is beneficial even if the cancer appears to be confined to her breast."

The study shows that, even if tamoxifen is to be given, chemotherapy produces additional benefit. Moreover, chemotherapy improves survival among women whose breast cancer is not hormone-sensitive, for whom there is as yet no clear evidence of benefit with tamoxifen.

The collaboration brought together detailed information from 47 randomised studies conducted over the past two decades around the world. There was no evidence of any survival advantage from using more than about three to six months of chemotherapy.

Related Links: The Lancet

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