Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4281798 The American Journal of Surgery 2008 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundThe significance of a contralateral breast cancer is largely unknown, making prophylactic mastectomy controversial.MethodsDifferences between stages of initial and contralateral cancers were determined by t test. Survival distributions were compared by log-rank analyses and compared with Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results data for unilateral cancers.ResultsMetachronous contralateral cancers occurred at a rate of .13% per year and were of significantly lower stage. Metachronous cancers adversely impacted survival for patients with low-stage initial cancers, but the interval between cancers was less than 36 months. Synchronous tumors occurred in 2.3% of patients; survival was worse than for patients with metachronous cancers.ConclusionsProphylactic mastectomy is unlikely to be beneficial because of the lower stages and low incidence of second cancers, even for patients with initial low-stage cancers.

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