v Share Your Health: Breast Cancer
Showing posts with label Breast Cancer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Breast Cancer. Show all posts

Payment Rates May Affect Breast Cancer Treatment

THURSDAY, April 28 (HealthDay News) — Use of a costly breast cancer therapy called intensity-modulated radiation therapy is strongly influenced by what Medicare will pay for the treatment and where radiation oncologists practice, according to a new study.

Researchers analyzed Medicare data for 26,163 women with localized breast cancer who had surgery and radiation therapy between 2001 and 2005. During that time, Medicare billing for the treatment, called IMRT, increased more than 10-fold (from 0.9 percent to 11.2 percent of patients).


The average cost for radiation treatment within the first year after breast cancer diagnosis was $7,179 without IMRT and $15,230 with it.

Billing for IMRT was five times higher in regions of the country where the treatment was covered by local Medicare carriers than it was in areas where it was not covered, the researchers said. They also found that billing for IMRT was more common among patients treated in freestanding radiation treatment centers (7.6 percent) than among those treated in hospital-based outpatient clinics (5.4 percent).

The findings “suggest that with respect to breast radiation therapy, much of the variation in cost can be directly attributed to inconsistent treatment definitions and reimbursement rates authorized by Medicare and its intermediaries,” concluded Dr. Benjamin D. Smith, of the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, and his colleagues.

The study is published in the April 29 online edition of in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

The findings “confirm the suspicion of many, both within and outside of the health care industry, that medical decision making is too heavily influenced by reimbursement rather than medical necessity,” Dr. Lisa A. Kachnic, of Boston University School of Medicine, and Dr. Simon N. Powell, of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, wrote in an accompanying editorial.

More information

The American College of Radiology and the Radiological Society of North America have more about IMRT.

– Robert Preidt

SOURCE: Journal of the National Cancer Institute, news release, April 29, 2011

Last Updated: April 28, 2011

Copyright © 2011 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

ACE Inhibitors Seem to Raise Risk of Breast Cancer Recurrence

By Amanda Gardner
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, April 21 (HealthDay News) — Two commonly used blood pressure medications seem to have opposite effects on the chances of breast cancer recurring in women with a personal history of the disease.

Preliminary findings show that ACE inhibitors increased the risk of recurrence, which surprised even the researchers, who published their study online in the journal Breast Cancer Research and Treatment.

On the other hand, beta blockers seemed to reduce the risk, which is in keeping with prior studies on the subject.

Fortunately, when the two drugs were combined, beta blockers seemed to mitigate the increased risk of recurrence linked with ACE inhibitors.

The study reflects the increasing interest among scientists in the effect the “microenvironment” — which can include chronically used medications in addition to alcohol, tobacco and physical activity — might have on the course of a particular woman’s breast cancer.

“Tumors may be living in the breast before we even known about it. The microenvironment may either facilitate or keep under control whether the cells disseminate,” said study first author Dr. Patricia A. Ganz, director of cancer prevention and control research at the Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center at University of California Los Angeles.

The study suggested that certain medications used to treat heart disease and high blood pressure might have an adverse effect on breast cancer survivors, she and the other researchers noted.

A 2010 study by Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers on mice had already looked at beta blockers and cancer spread (or metastasis). That study began by documenting that stress can affect how fast and how widely a tumor spreads in rodents. The mice were confined in a small tube for a couple of hours a day, and the resulting stress prompted immune cells to gather in the tumor cells, enabling quicker metastasis and a 30-fold increase in cancer spread, deeper analysis revealed.

But in this animal model, beta blockers managed to block the signals that were recruiting the immune cells, explained Ganz.

That same year, a study of more than 400 women in England and Germany found that women on beta blockers also had a lower likelihood of breast cancer recurrence.

The UCLA researchers decided to delve deeper, working with other scientists on a database of 1,779 women with early-stage breast cancer who had been treated at a large health maintenance organization in northern California and followed for about eight years in a study called Life After Cancer Epidemiology (LACE).

The women in the group who were taking ACE inhibitors had a 56 percent increased risk of a recurrence, although they had no increased risk of death.

The 14 percent of women who were taking propanolol — the beta blocker considered most likely to have a protective effect — had a reduced risk of recurrence. Because the number of women in this group was so small, the findings did not reach statistical significance, Ganz said, although “it was going in the right direction in terms of being protective.”

The risk associated with taking both drugs together was somewhat in the middle.

The study was funded by the Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center Foundation, the Breast Cancer Research Foundation and the U.S. National Cancer Institute.

Noting the need for further studies, Ganz is working with researchers in Denmark and Canada to evaluate the same medications and their relationship to recurrence in much larger samples of breast cancer patients.

“We’ve always been addressing the treatment of the cancer itself but in this study [they were looking at whether] there is something in the host, in the milieu that makes us more susceptible to the development of a malignancy. Is there something we can actually change?” said Dr. Lauren Cassell, chief of breast surgery at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.

Still, the research is very preliminary. “People have to realize this is just a work-in-progress and shouldn’t stop their medicines if they happen to be on one of these medications,” said Dr. Nieca Goldberg, director of the Women’s Heart Program at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City.

“If they are concerned because they have breast cancer or they’re at high risk for breast cancer,” Goldberg said, “they should really express this to their doctors because there are other options for medicines.”

More information

The U.S. National Cancer Institute has more on breast cancer.

SOURCES: Patricia A. Ganz, M.D., director, cancer prevention and control research, Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of California, Los Angeles; Nieca Goldberg, M.D., director, Women’s Heart Program, NYU Langone Medical Center, New York City; Lauren Cassell, M.D., chief of breast surgery, Lenox Hill Hospital, New York City; April 10, 2011, Breast Cancer Research and Treatment, online

Last Updated: April 21, 2011

Copyright © 2011 HealthDay. All rights reserved.