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Specialist Breast
Surgeons Give Patients Better Chance of Survival Behind the Cancer Headlines® July 31, 2003 Breast Cancer patients operated on 10 years ago by specialists have done better than those treated by surgeons with fewer breast cancer patients, a British study reveals. Reporting their results in the British Journal of Cancer, Cancer
Research UK scientists found that patients operated on by surgeons with an
annual breast cancer caseload of more than 50 patients have a 68 percent chance
of survival after five years. But the survival rate dropped to
60 percent among patients whose surgeons performed fewer than 10 breast cancer
operations a year. So if a specialist surgeon operates on 100 women, 8 more
women will survive at least 5 years than if all 100 of them had been operated
on by a less experienced colleague. The study was carried out by
Cancer Research UK using data from the Northern and Yorkshire Cancer Registry
Information Service (NYCRIS) and was based on more than 11,000 patients over a
five-year period. It also found that the patients of
specialist surgeons were more likely to have chemotherapy. Dr. Jasmina
Mikeljevic, who led the study for Cancer Research UK
at St James' Hospital in Leeds, says: "Patients whose surgeons performed
more than 30 breast cancer operations a year were less likely to have surgery
on its own and more likely to have additional treatment. "This is because surgeons
with higher caseloads usually work in multi-disciplinary teams where they would
join a wide range of cancer specialists and so patients would have more
comprehensive access to other treatments. "Our figures for survival
were based on patients treated between 1989 and 1994. We believe the situation
has steadily improved in Yorkshire since then and future data should bear this
out." In 1996, the Department of Health
recommended that patients should be managed by breast cancer teams, which would
include specialist surgeons. Mikeljevic believes the
results of the NYCRIS study reinforce the importance of this recommendation. Dr. John Toy, Medical Director at
Cancer Research UK, says: "The study indicates that a woman with breast
cancer has a better outlook if she is looked after by a team of expert medical
staff working together as members of a multi-disciplinary team. Such a team
should obviously include a specialist surgeon, who is doing breast cancer
operations frequently. SOURCES: British Journal of Cancer, July 29, 2003 Cancer Research UK
(http://www.cancerresearchuk.org) DISCLAIMER!Behind the Cancer Headlines (TM) is a service of Willis-Knighton Cancer Center.The articles in Behind the Cancer Headlines (TM) are written by national medical editorsand writers who review current literature and develop timely articles in non-technicallanguage. Sources of information are cited for each article. If you have questions, referto the sources listed or to your physician. Willis-Knighton Cancer Center is notresponsible for content. Articles are updated on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. This information is provided for information only and is not a substitute for informationfrom or care by a physician. |
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