| June 28,
2007
HealthDay News
Breast Cancer Survival May Run in Families
Women can look to their mothers and sisters
to help determine their chances of survival from breast cancer,
new research suggests.
This Swedish study, published in the online issue ofBreast Cancer
Research, found that if a woman succumbs to breast cancer, her daughters
or sisters have a 60 percent increased risk of dying from the disease
if they develop it.
Led by Mikael Hartman from the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm.
a team of researchers used Sweden's Multi-Generation Register to
identify 2,787 mother-daughter pairs and 831 sister pairs of women
who were diagnosed with breast cancer between 1961 and 2001.
The researchers found that daughters of mothers who survived breast
cancer after five years had a 91 percent chance of surviving the
disease, compared with an 87 percent chance for daughters of mothers
who died within five years.
The same went for sisters. Having a sister who died of breast cancer
within five years gave a 70 percent chance of survival, compared
with an 88 percent chance of survival for those who had a sister
who survived for five years.
Overall, the daughters and the sisters of a woman who died within
five years were 60 percent to 70 percent more likely of dying from
the disease within five years if they developed it.
These findings are "relevant to women with newly diagnosed
breast cancer" and to those treating them, Hartman said in
a prepared statement.
Future research is needed to determine what inherited factors may
play a role in survival.
More information:
The
National Cancer Institute has more about breast cancer.
|