BEIJING, Feb. 10 (Chinese medianet) -- Pregnant women who
develop breast cancer have no difference in odds of death compared to other
young breast cancer patients, said a study published Monday in the journal
Cancer.
The study is one of the largest to examine whether
breast cancer hits pregnant women harder than other women. It contradicted some
smaller, earlier studies that suggested maternity made things worse.
In the study, researchers analyzed data from 652
women ages 35 and younger who were treated for breast cancer at the University
of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center from 1973 through 2006.
The result showed that rates of cancer recurrence,
cancer spread and survival were normally the same for the women with
pregnancy-associated breast cancers and other young women with the disease.
"Breast cancer in young women is a highly aggressive
disease, and it's important that we study it in hopes of making a difference in
terms of treatment," said the study's lead author, Dr. Beth Beadle of
thecenter.
It's estimated that up to 3.8 percent of pregnancies
are complicated by breast cancer, and approximately 10 percent of breast cancer
patients under age 40 develop the disease during pregnancy, said the
researchers.
M. D. Anderson has a long history of being at the
forefront of treating pregnant women for breast cancer.
(Agencies)
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