Pregnancy Safe for Women With
Estrogen-Sensitive Breast Cancer
Early study finds these women were no more likely than others to
have disease recur.
Pregnancy is safe for women with estrogen receptor-positive
breast cancer, according to a new study.These types of breast
tumors are especially sensitive to levels of estrogen in the body, and the
findings address concerns that pregnancy could increase circulating estrogen
and thereby cause the cancer to return.
This study's results
suggest that becoming pregnant at any time after being diagnosed with breast
cancer does not increase the risk of recurrence, even if the pregnancy occurs
within two years after cancer diagnosis, according to the researchers.
In addition, breast cancer
patients who become pregnant appear to survive longer than those who do not,
according to Dr. Hatem Azim Jr., a medical oncologist at the Jules Bordet
Institute in Brussels, Belgium, and colleagues.
Their study included 333
breast cancer patients who later became pregnant and 874 breast cancer patients
who did not. Over an average of nearly five years of follow-up, breast cancer
recurred in 30 percent of all the women.
Fifty-seven percent of the
women in the study had estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer. Becoming
pregnant made no difference in the length of time that patients with either
estrogen receptor-positive or estrogen receptor-negative breast cancer survived
without their cancer recurring, according to the study, which is slated for
presentation Wednesday at the European Breast Cancer Conference, in Vienna,
Austria.
"We found that
patients who became pregnant within two years of breast cancer diagnosis
appeared to have a better disease-free survival compared to those who did not
become pregnant," Azim said in a conference news release.
"However, a clear
trend over time was not demonstrated; hence this finding should be interpreted
with caution as it could be confounded by potential selection bias, and hence
pregnancy within two years of diagnosis should be regarded as safe, and not as
protective," Azim noted.
A secondary goal of the
study was to determine the impact of pregnancy on overall survival.
"We found that breast
cancer patients who became pregnant also had a lower risk of death compared to
their matched controls, irrespective of [estrogen receptor] status," Azim
said.
Because this study was
presented at a medical meeting, the data and conclusions should be viewed as
preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.
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