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Study Finds Increase in Double Mastectomies ; Results Surprise Researchers

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Study Finds Increase in Double Mastectomies ; Results Surprise Researchers

Oct 23, 01:42 PM

Current Headlines: By THOMAS H. MAUGH II, SPECIAL FROM THE LOS ANGELES TIMES

The number of women having both breasts removed after a tumor is found in one increased by 150 percent over a five-year period despite a lack of evidence showing that double mastectomies increase survival in most women, researchers reported Monday.

Current guidelines for treatment of a localized breast cancer call only for removal of the tumor and not for a mastectomy much less a double mastectomy.

But an increasing number of women, particularly young white women, are pushing for the more aggressive procedure for reasons that are not totally clear, the researchers said.

They surmised that some women believe the health care system did not detect their tumor early enough and that continued screening would not be effective; others might have been traumatized by chemotherapy. Improvements in reconstructive surgery also have made a double mastectomy a more acceptable alternative.

"If they are making this decision based on fear, and thinking that it will increase their survival, then that would concern me," said Dr. Julie Gralow of the University of Washington, a spokeswoman for the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

"But if they understand that it won't necessarily improve their survival, and that emotionally it is the best thing for them, then we would have to support it," said Gralow, who was not involved in the study.

Dr. Benjamin Paz of the City of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center in Southern California, however, finds the trend "alarming, because the goal of medicine is to help people live well with their organs."

Paz, who also was not involved in the study, attributes the trend in large part to the increasing use of MRIs, which reveal many small lesions in breasts that were not observed before.

"A woman goes through this, and she feels that [the cancer] is spreading all over," he said. "It is very difficult to explain to such a woman that she can be treated with breast conservation."

An estimated 178,480 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer this year, according to the American Cancer Society, and about 40,460 will die of it.

Dr. Todd M. Tuttle of the University of Minnesota Medical School and his colleagues decided to perform the study because they had noticed an increasing incidence of double mastectomies but could find no data about the frequency of its occurrence.

(c) 2007 Record, The; Bergen County, N.J.. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.

Study Finds Increase in Double Mastectomies ; Results Surprise Researchers
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