Author Interviews, Breast Cancer, Mayo Clinic, NEJM / 03.01.2015
Risk of Breast Cancer in Women With Atypical Hyperplasia Better Defined
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Dr. Lynn C. Hartmann MD
Professor of Oncology, Mayo Clinic
Associate Director for Education of the Mayo Clinic Cancer Center.
Medical Research: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Dr. Hartmann: Women with atypical hyperplasia of the breast – which is defined via breast biopsy that was done to evaluate findings on a mammogram or a palpable concern – have been considered a “high risk” group of women, but the extent of their risk has not been clearly defined. As a consequence, practice guidelines for high-risk women (eg for screening MRI) do not include them. Mayo Clinic has developed a cohort of women with atypical hyperplasia who have been followed long-term for later breast cancers and we show that their risk of developing breast cancer is about 30% at 25 years of follow-up. This same level of risk was confirmed in the other large cohort of women with atypical hyperplasia, based at Vanderbilt University (Nashville Breast Cohort). This level of risk meets the current criterion for screening MRI and should also encourage the use of anti-estrogen drugs, such as tamoxifen, which have already been shown to be efficacious in this population of women. (more…)