Breast density can influence cancer recurrence, study finds
It's becoming increasingly clear that women should learn, as part of an
overall risk-assessment for breast cancer, whether they have dense breast
tissue. Not only is it harder to detect a tumor in dense breast tissue, studies
show that the risk of breast cancer is increased up to six times in women with
the highest breast density scores compared with women with the lowest breast
density scores.
Now a study suggests breast density may play a role in
determining the best treatment strategy for women diagnosed with breast cancer.
Researchers at the Women's College Research Institute in
The study found that patients with the highest breast
density had a much higher risk of cancer recurrence than did women with the
lowest breast density. After 10 years, the women with the highest breast
density had a 21% chance of recurrence compared with 5% among the women with
the lowest density. Among women who did not receive radiation therapy after the
lumpectomy, those with high-density breast tissue had a 40% chance of
recurrence.
It may be important for women who undergo lumpectomy
to have additional cancer therapies if they have high-density breast tissue,
the authors concluded, even though it's a mystery as to why dense tissue is
more problematic.
"The biological basis for the associations
between mammographic density, breast cancer risk and breast cancer recurrence
are not known," they wrote.
Source: latimesblogs.latimes.com
