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Breast Cancer Survivors
Face Other Cancer Risks
Women who survive a bout with breast cancer are at increased
risk of developing cancers of the lung, stomach, and colon, among
several others, new research suggests.
The elevated risk of other cancers could be due to the treatment
given to fight the breast cancer, or perhaps to a genetic predisposition
to develop cancer, the researchers believe.
The findings, which appear in an online issue of the International
Journal of Cancer, are based on a study of 525,527 women from
13 population-based cancer registries who were diagnosed with
breast cancer and followed for other malignancies from 1943 to
2000.
Compared with the general population, breast cancer survivors
were 25 percent more likely to develop a second malignancy, lead
author Dr. Lene Mellemkjaer, from the Danish Cancer Society in
Copenhagen, and colleagues report.
Survivors were at increased risk for stomach cancer, colorectal
cancer, lung cancer, soft tissue sarcoma, melanoma, non-melanoma
skin cancer, endometrial cancer, ovarian cancer, renal cancer,
thyroid cancer, and leukemia. The elevated risks ranged from
22 percent for colorectal cancer to 125 percent for soft tissue
sarcoma.
As the time from breast cancer diagnosis increased, so did the
risk of a second malignancy. In keeping with this finding, the
older a woman was when breast cancer was diagnosed, the less
likely was she to develop a second malignancy.
"The excess of cancer after a breast cancer diagnosis is likely
to be explained by treatment for breast cancer and by shared
genetic or environmental risk factors, although the general excess
of cancer suggests that there may be additional explanations
such as increased surveillance and general cancer susceptibility," the
authors conclude.
SOURCE: International Journal of Cancer, online December 8,
2005. Reference
Source 89
December
8,
2005
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