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Large
Breast Cancer Tumors Rise in 1990s
A new analysis shows a small but surprising
upswing during the 1990s in the proportion of women with newly
diagnosed breast cancer who have unusually large tumors, which
are more likely to prove fatal.
Experts are uncertain why this
happened, but they speculate that both obesity and hormone replacement
therapy may have fueled the growth of larger cancers, even during
a time when the discovery of small tumors rose dramatically as
a result of widespread mammography.
The analysis, prepared by the American
Cancer Society, found that the incidence of large tumors increased
by just over 2 percent a year between 1992 and 2000, but only
in white women.
"The great majority of tumors in
white women are small and at a localized stage," said Dr. Michael
Thun, senior author of the report. "But we were surprised to see
there has been an increase in tumors of five centimeters or more."
The analysis is based on the National
Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results
program, a database of cancer incidence and survival data that
covers about 14 percent of the U.S. population. It was published
in the latest issue of the cancer society's journal CA.
In 2000, there were 6.3 cases of
breast cancer larger than five centimeters for every 100,000 white
women in the United States, compared with 5.6 cases in 1992. Still,
smaller tumors are much more common. In 2000, there were 90 tumors
size two centimeters or smaller per 100,000 and 34 that were between
two and five centimeters.
Large tumors are about twice as
common in black women. The cancer society attributes this to less
access to high-quality screening, particularly for poor women.
In 2000, there were 12 cases of large tumors for every 100,000
black women, a figure that changed little throughout the 1990s.
Overall, breast cancer survival
is improving. Since about 1990, the breast cancer death rate has
been falling by 2 1/2 percent annually for whites and 1 percent
for blacks. Experts say they think better treatment, including
widespread use of the drug tamoxifen, as well as mammogram screening
are responsible for the improvement.
However, cancer can take many years
to kill after it is discovered, and the increase in newly diagnosed
large tumors is worrisome, because they are more likely to have
spread and are harder to cure.
"I'm not sure what to make of it.
It's a surprise," says Dr. Phyllis Wingo, an epidemiologist at
the Centers for Disease control and Prevention. She said other
studies that follow women's health for long periods of time could
help confirm the finding as well as help doctors figure out its
cause.
The hormone estrogen can fuel the
growth of breast cancers. Thun said the most likely explanation
for the rising tumor size is increases in women's estrogen levels
resulting from obesity and hormone replacement therapy, or HRT,
after menopause.
Fat tissue itself makes estrogen.
About two-thirds of U.S. women over 50 are overweight. The cancer
society estimates weight contributes to between one-third and
one-half of all breast cancer deaths among older women.
The use of hormone replacement
pills, which include estrogen, has fallen since last year, when
a study showed that the widely used treatment after menopause
increases the risk of breast cancer, heart attacks and stroke.
That study found breast tumors were slightly larger, on average,
among the hormone users.
"Is it biologically tenable that
HRT and obesity could have contributed? The answer is clearly
yes," said Dr. Larry Norton, deputy physician-in-chief for breast
cancer programs at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New
York City.
Dr. Daniel Kopans, director of
breast imaging at Massachusetts General Hospital, noted that breast
cancer deaths began to decline five to seven years after mammograms
became widespread.
"I am at a loss to understand why
there was the blip in very large cancers," he said. "I can speculate
that women who do not want to be screened also neglect to bring
their cancers to their doctor's attention and delay seeking care
even longer than before screening was available."
Dr. Cheryl Perkins, senior clinical
adviser at the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation, said the
push during the 1990s to increase mammography, especially among
poorer women, may have led to the discovery of large tumors in
those who had never been screened before.
"If you bring new women into the
screening arena, you may find larger tumors initially," she said.
"If you continue to screen, you will find smaller ones."
Journal: http://caonline.amcancersoc.org
Reference
Source 102
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