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Breast Cancer News

Breast Cancer Deaths Continue To Fall In US

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Main Category: Breast Cancer
Article Date: 26 Sep 2007 - 3:00 PDT

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A new report by the American Cancer Society (ACS) shows that in the US, the overall rate of deaths from breast cancer in women continues to fall by around 2 per cent a year, a trend that started in 1990. However stark racial disparities within this figure continue to grow.

The ACS produce the report, in this case titled Breast Cancer Facts and Figures 2007-2008, every other year. It suggests that this downward trend, which is described as a "winning streak" is due mostly to advances in early detection and treatment.

However, the advances have not been the same for all races. The cancer death rate for white and Hispanic/Latina women fell by 2.4 per cent between 1995 and 2004, but over the same period fell by only 1.6 per cent for African-American women, and did not change at all for Asian American/Pacific Islanders or American Indian/Alaskan Native women.

The report also shows a decline in the rate of breast cancer incidence, the rate of new cases occurring every year, but cautions that this could be due to fewer women going for mammograms.

Chief Medical Officer of the ACS, Dr Harmon J Eyre, said the steady decrease each year is thanks to "increased efforts at prevention, better methods of detecting cancer early, and treatment advances".

American women today are less likely to die of breast cancer than they have been in decades, said Harmon in a statement from the ACS.

However, this news is better for some groups than others, continued Eyre:

"Perhaps most troubling is the striking divergence in long-term mortality trends seen between African-American and white females that began in the early 1980s and that by 2004 had led to death rates being 36 per cent higher in African-American women."

The report also shows that in the US: The report also mentions the major risk factors for breast cancer that women can do something about themselves. For example, keeping control of weight; obesity increases the risk of postmenopausal (but not premenopausal) breast cancer. Gaining weight in adulthood does also.

Two other risk factors than women can do something about themselves include alcohol and exercise.

Women who have only 2 alcoholic drinks a day have a 21 per cent less chance of breast cancer, and women who exercise vigorously for 45 to 60 minutes 5 days or more a week can also lower their breast cancer risk. And for postmenopausal women, any amount of regular exercise reduces the risk of breast cancer.

Groundbreaking advances in breast cancer research, such as those looking at chemoprevention and "rational therapeutic" drugs tailored to individual patients and tumours are also mentioned in the ACS report.

The report also describes investigative trials such as the Sister Study that is looking for 50,000 cancer-free women who have a sister with a history of breast cancer. The study will track the women for 10 years and collect data on their genes, lifestyle and environment and will examine the link between these factors and breast cancer risk.

Chief Executive Officer of the ACS, Dr John R Seffrin, said:

"Taken together, this report highlights the remarkable gains we've made in the fight against breast cancer."

"But", he added, "it also puts into focus the challenge before us: to close the gap so all Americans can reap the benefits equally, and to ensure that no American woman faces an increased risk of dying from breast cancer because of her race or ethnicity or because of lack of access to quality care."

Click here for American Cancer Society.

Written by: Catharine Paddock
Copyright: Medical News Today
Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today


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