Prophylactic Mastectomy – an ounce of prevention is worth 5% of cure Google

scale Prophylactic Mastectomy   an ounce of prevention is worth 5% of cure

Sometimes things that are so obviously intuitive still have to be validated. After a number of years of controversy, an increasing utilized surgery to prevent is now being shown to be quite effective in both risk reduction and cancer-related mortality. The study “A Population-Based Study of Contralateral Prophylactic and Survival Outcomes of Patients” is published in the Journal of the and can be seen here.

Contralateral prophylactic , (CPM), a preventive procedure to remove the unaffected breast in patients with disease in one breast, clearly appears to offer a survival benefit to patients age 50 and younger, who have early-stage disease and are estrogen receptor (ER) negative. We’ve known for several decades that CPM reduced the risk of developing , but it was always more elusive to show that it actually saved lives at the end of the day. The practice of CPM has expanded significantly, with >150% growth in the number of such since the late 1990’s.

How effective is CPM? Those younger than age 50 with early stage cancer with ER negative disease had a survival benefit of almost 5% at five years.  For a therapeutic intervention for cancer, 5% is really substantial. You can take it to the bank that following these patients out even farther that we will show increased survival benefit with longer follow-up in the population. This is due to the fact that

  1. the patient’s likelihood of getting a second in the non-removed breast increases with time
  2. patients with prior are among the highest risk group for developing

Women older then 50 have a little more complicated decision. In cold, hard actuarial terms you are more likely to die from something else before a new  would kill you. On the other hand, steadily increasing lifespans of adult Americans has made some of these kind of statistical bets have to be reexamined. I would guess that the reported benefit of CPM gradually increases towards 60 years in future clinical guidelines.

Rob

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