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Featured Breast Cancer Articles

Breast Cancer Treatment: Surviving Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy is a word that strikes fear into most of our hearts. We've seen the movies and heard such horrible stories about undergoing this difficult treatment for a disease that could very well kill us. I underwent chemo for breast cancer and know ...

How Women Can Protect Themselves From Breast Cancer
Chances are you know someone - a family member, colleague, or friend who has been affected by cancer. You'll want to learn more about prevention especially if you have a history of cancer in your family. There are over two hundred different types of ...

Mammograms Are No Joke - They Can Save Lives!
There are so many jokes about mammograms! Have you heard the one about the fridge door .or the bookends .or the garage floor? Thanks to all the jokes, "Mammogram" has become a household word, and it's not that I don't have a sense of humor, but as a ...





Are Obese Women Getting Short-Changed By Chemotherapy Treatments?
 
How much chemotherapy does an obese woman need? Typically an obese woman with breast cancer would receive reduced doses of chemotherapy as they battle breast cancer. Back in June of 2005, a study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine concluded that obese women should receive chemotherapy based on actual women, and not in reduced amounts as the standard practice.

And now again a study presented in the August 2005 edition of Lancet claims that doctors should not reduce chemotherapy doses for obese women when no receptors for the hormone oestrogen have been found on the breast cancer cells. This type of cancer is called oestrogen-receptor negative.

Clinicians often reduce chemotherapy doses for obese patients because of worries about how the treatment may react with the patient and affect their overall health.

According to the study's director Marco Colleoni of the European Institute of Oncology, Italy, and his colleagues, reducing the first course of chemotherapy for obese patients with oestrogen-receptor negative breast cancer proves "detrimental".

Colleoni and his team looked at the relation between body-mass index (BMI), chemotherapy dose reduction, oestrogen receptor expression, and outcome for pre-menopausal women with breast cancer by examining data from four randomized trials.

They found that 97 out of 249 obese patients received less than 85% of protocol specified dose during the first course of chemotherapy compared with patients with normal and intermediate BMI.

Obese patients with oestrogen-receptor negative disease that received 85% or more of the first protocol specified dose had significantly better disease-free survival and overall survival than those who received less than 85% of the normally recommended dosage.

Yet, obese patients with oestrogen-receptor positive breast cancer who had reduced doses of chemotherapy did not have a significant difference in their outcome compared with those given the recommended chemotherapy doses.

And contrary to popular practice, the researchers also noticed that obese patients initially treated with protocol doses of chemotherapy did not have more toxicity than patients who received reduced doses.

Dr Marco Colleoni concluded that, "Our findings suggest that for women with ER-absent or ER-low tumours, reduction in chemotherapy dose should be avoided."

The message for obese women coping with cancer is to be aware of your risks and rights. Ask your doctor will she recommend lower doses of chemotherapy for you based on your weight and ask why.

Resource: Lancet, Archives of Internal Medicine
About the Author
Health author and Stanford University graduate Naweko San-Joyz lovingly writes from her home in San Diego. Her works include Acne Messages: Crack the Code of Your Zits and Say Goodbye to Acne (ISBN: 0974912204) and Skinny Fat Chicks, Why We're Still Not Getting This Dieting Thing (ISBN: 0974912212). http://www.Noixia.com>http://www.Noixia.com

Breast Cancer News



University at Buffalo Reporter

Detailing the problems of 'breast cancer culture'
Washington Post
In the early '90s, a Simi Valley, Calif., woman named Charlotte Haley, appalled at the minuscule amount of money going to cancer research, created the first breast cancer ribbon. It was an orangey-pink — salmon-colored, really — and made of fabric.
Breast cancer philanthropy featured in women's film festivalUniversity at Buffalo Reporter
First Run Features to Release New Feature Documentary, Pink Ribbons, Inc.Movie City News

all 4 news articles »

ABC News

Komen's Nancy Brinker: "I made some mistakes"
CBS News
Nancy Brinker, the founder and CEO of leading breast cancer charity Susan G. Komen for the Cure Foundation, said Wednesday she "made some mistakes" surrounding her organization's widely criticized decision to defund Planned Parenthood.
Komen's Next HeadacheWall Street Journal
Karen Heller: Defunding Planned Parenthood: Did you know it serves men, too?Philadelphia Inquirer
Could the Komen Charitable Catastrophe Have Been Avoided?Forbes
The Chattanoogan -HealthNews
all 1,098 news articles »

Twin County Regional Hospital gets breast cancer awareness grant
WSLS
The Avon Breast Health Outreach Program has awarded a $33232 one-year grant to Twin County Regional Hospital to increase awareness of the life-saving benefits of early detection of breast cancer. It is the first year that the program has received ...

and more »

Most women with cancer want a role in decisions
Reuters
By Kerry Grens | NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - About two-thirds of women diagnosed with early stage breast cancer want to take part in making decisions about their treatment, according to a new survey of patients from five different countries.
Are Older Breast Cancer Patients Undertreated?CBS42
Breast cancer kills older women more oftenFox News
Older doesn't mean less likely to benefit from breast cancer treatmentsAmerican Council on Science and Health
MedPage Today
all 16 news articles »

Sky News

Surgery and chemotherapy are possible for pregnant women with breast cancer
Medical Xpress
Breast cancer in pregnant women is as common as in non-pregnant women of the same age, with no evidence to suggest pregnancy increases the risk of such cancer. In the majority of cases, pregnant women can have their breast cancer treated with surgery ...
Pregnancy cancer treatment 'hope'The Press Association
Safe To Treat Pregnant Cancer PatientsSky News
Cancer Treatment OK During PregnancyMedPage Today
Washington Post
all 91 news articles »