Decline in Breast
Cancer Deaths Explained by Use of Screening and Adjuvant Therapies
Behind the Cancer Headlines®
Early detection through screening mammography and improved adjuvant treatment have contributed almost equally to the substantial decrease in breast cancer death rates over the past 10 to 15 years, researchers conclude in an unprecedented effort to parse out the factors that have led to the decline.
The study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, was supported by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) and conducted by seven research groups, including The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center.
Researchers sought to end the longstanding controversy of whether screening mammography, better treatment or a combination of the two is responsible for improved breast cancer survival. The seven teams consisting of 43 investigators designed their own statistical models to determine the contribution of each method. These independent models used the same sources of data, some of which had not been mined before, but their approaches and assumptions differed.
The teams reached somewhat different conclusions, but were closest to each other in estimating how much the adjuvant therapies tamoxifen and chemotherapy reduced mortality in patients (12 percent to 21 percent, with a median of 19 percent). The range for screening mammography, however, was 7 percent to 23 percent (with a median of 15 percent), reflecting the greater uncertainty associated with estimating the benefit of screening.
Still, according to the models, the combination of screening and adjuvant therapy together reduced the breast cancer death rate by an estimated 25 percent to 38 percent, with a median of 30 percent - which explains the drop in breast cancer mortality from 1975 to 2000, says the study's lead author, Donald Berry, Ph.D., chair of the Department of Biostatistics and Applied Mathematics at M. D. Anderson Cancer Center.
"While we didn't agree with each other as to the percentages of benefit, all seven groups concluded that the decline in the rate of death from breast cancer is a combination of screening and therapy and not restricted to one or the other," he says. "Screening would have no benefit if not followed by treatment, including surgery, and treatment has the potential to be more effective if cancer is detected at earlier stages by screening."
He adds that the survival benefits offered by screening and
adjuvant therapy both may be lower than researchers had expected. "Some
people think the benefit of screening is huge, and others say that the
reduction in death rates is due primarily to adjuvant therapy,"
The study was undertaken by the Cancer Intervention and
Surveillance Modeling Network (CISNET), a consortium of investigators sponsored
by the NCI whose purpose is to measure the effect of cancer-control
interventions on the incidence of and risk of death from cancer in the general
population. The seven breast cancer teams involved in this study are from
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in
Researchers say there is no question that breast cancer
death rates have fallen in recent decades, both in the
The two major changes in breast oncology over that time have
been the advent of screening mammography (which 70 percent of women over age 40
received in 2000) and the use of adjuvant therapies - chemotherapy and hormone
therapy used in conjunction with primary treatment by surgery and/or radiation.
But because each of these factors gained in popularity and use at about the
same time, it is not a simple matter to separate out the relative contribution
of each to improved survival,
To find out, the CISNET groups used data that reflected
"real life" use of screening and adjuvant therapy, including some population
databases that had not been tapped before for this purpose. Their analysis
relied on the incidence of breast cancer as reported by the Surveillance,
Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) program and the rate of death from breast
cancer as reported by the
The models reached somewhat different estimates. Dana-Farber's model found that screening mammography accounted for 65 percent of the reduced breast cancer death rate (with 35 percent due to use of chemotherapy and tamoxifen) while the M. D. Anderson model reached the opposite conclusion - that 65 percent of the mortality benefit is due to adjuvant chemotherapy and 35 percent is due to screening.
The models now in place can be used to answer a number of
questions related to screening and treatment,
In this way, the models may "help determine what
strategies for delivering medical care are best for patients,"
SOURCES:
University of