|
|
| The cruelest myth of all: when breast cancer strikes during pregnancy.
By Dr. Joel Brind |
Popular women’s magazines talk about breast cancer all the time. Sadly, they give almost no
coverage to the evidence linking abortion to the incidence of breast cancer, as was prominently noted by Evan Gahr in the August 21 Wall Street
Journal[6]. Every so often, a story will run on the tragic situation of women who
are diagnosed with gestational breast cancer, that is, breast cancer when it occurs during pregnancy.
Even more tragic is the characterization of this difficult situation as “a mother’s dangerous choice”: “My life or the baby’s?” Thus
was the mother and child relationship put in all too typical adversarial terms in an article by Debra Kent
in this year’s May issue of Redbook[7]. The lay reader will get the same story from a popular health magazine written for the doctor’s office
waiting room. Check out, for example, the December, 1993 issue of American Health (published by
Readers’ Digest), where author Gail McBride[8] quotes advice from Dr. Jeanne
Petrek, a breast surgeon at prestigious Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City: “If the cancer is detected early in pregnancy,
therapeutic abortion ‘deserves the strongest consideration’”. But the real tragedy here is that this advice, whether given in the
waiting room or the hospital room, is unsound. The very idea that a woman’s chances of long term survival are
maximized by removing her fetus, which “allows full conventional treatment” (to quote Dr. Petrek from McBride’s article again) is
simply not borne out by over half a century’s worth of worldwide published data. In fact, the data provide
convincing evidence that exactly the opposite is true: saving the baby’s life provides the best chance of
saving the mother’s life as well.
It is instructive to consult Dr. Petrek’s own published research on
gestational breast cancer, which appeared in the journal Cancer in 1991. In this paper, Dr. Petrek
reports on the fate of the 12 cases treated at Sloan-Kettering between 1960 and 1980. Since only four of these
patients had undergone “therapeutic abortion”, she concluded there were
insufficient data to determine whether
the abortions had increased survival in any of the patients. However, in the same paper, Dr. Petrek
also reviewed the results of two earlier Sloan-Kettering studies and two recent studies at other
hospitals. Her conclusion was conclusive, to wit, that these data “do not show any advantage in survival rate with
therapeutic abortion.”
An earlier paper from Israel shows a similarly disturbing discordance between conclusions given by the
same doctors in their abstract (which shows up on computer searches) v. in the body of the paper. In their 1982 review in the Journal of Surgical Oncology, Drs. E.
Hornstein et al.[10] said in their abstract: “women with breast cancer in their first trimester of pregnancy and in whom
axillary lymph nodes are involved, should ... have their pregnancy terminated.” But in the text of the same review, Hornstein et al. flatly
advised: “Pregnancy should not be terminated as it does not affect the clinical course and survival rate.”
And even back in 1982, this was hardly news to anyone familiar with the medical literature on the
subject. As early as 1956, Drs. White and White reviewed the worldwide medical literature on gestational
breast cancer for the Annals of Surgery, and concluded “no definite benefit could be claimed from
therapeutic abortion.”[11] Across the Atlantic, Parisian Dr. P. Juret, in his review of the
literature up to 1976[12], was even more definitive: “the total inefficacy of therapeutic abortion is now
certain.” This was echoed by Dr. K.W. Schweppe et al. in their 1980 German review of the worldwide
literature[13]: “There is no medical indication for an abortion.”
Back in the US, Dr. William Donegan of the Medical College of Wisconsin acknowledged in his 1977
review[14], that in most cases, “Most authorities now deny the value of
therapeutic abortion and accumulating
data substantiate this view.” In addition to this concordance of data from a multiplicity of small studies extending over half a
century, there is also one particular place where the issue of pregnancy-associated breast cancer has been
studied so carefully for so long as to generate statistically reliable results on its own: the Princess Margaret
Hospital of Toronto, Canada. Gestational breast cancer only represents about 1-2% of all breast cancer
cases, but Princess Margaret has been accumulating case histories since 1931, and publishing the results
every several years.
The most recent paper, authored by Drs. R.M. Clark and T. Chua[15], and published in 1989, reported on
the fate of 154 patients with gestational breast cancer. It should be noted that in gestational breast cancer, the cancer is
usually discovered at an advanced stage (since symptoms are masked by the pregnancy), and the prognosis
is generally poor. Thus, in the Toronto series (whose data are summarized in the graph below) , only 20 percent of the patients who
carried their pregnancies to term were alive 20 years later. But strikingly, all 21 patients who had
undergone “therapeutic abortion” were dead within eleven years. But why, then, if there is no evidence that having an abortion helps
the woman with breast cancer, do many doctors (even Drs. Clark and Chua) still recommend “therapeutic
abortion” if the cancer is advanced and discovered during the first trimester?
This question was best answered by Kaiser-Permanente surgeon Dr. Philip Nugent and colleagues in
1985[16]: “Termination of pregnancy we would recommend in these (advanced cancer) groups, not because
of the effect of the pregnancy on the breast cancer, but rather the detrimental effect the chemotherapy (or
radiation therapy) may have on the fetus.”
This widely prevalent line of thinking raises even an even more
troubling question, to wit: How can medical practice in a civilized society countenance the oxymoronic use
of the word “therapeutic”, i.e., in the context of killing a fetus for its own good?
Notwithstanding the lack of a good answer to this question, there is yet another body of medical
evidence which makes the question even more compelling; evidence which demonstrates a remarkable capacity for the fetus to withstand agressive maternal cancer therapy
without ill effect. And again, this body of medical evidence goes back quite a few years.
In his excellent 1981 review of fetal effects of cancer chemotherapeutic drugs, Dr. Hugh
Barber[17] of
Lenox Hill Hospital in New York observed the following clear trends:
1) “After the first trimester, following the anlage for all organs,
administration of anticancer drugs singly or in combination does not appear to increase the rate of
congenital anomaly (birth defects)”.
2) Although avoidance of chemotherapy in the first trimester is
recommended, “the data reviewed herein do not indicate that harmful effects are inevitable. When
chemotherapy is required in early pregnancy, the physician may be able to minimize the additional risk of
congenital malformations by avoiding combination therapy or use of folic acid antagonists such as
methotrexate.”
Hard data back up these conclusions. A lengthy 1983 review by Dr. Marc
Wallack et al[18] of Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri, cited data from a
1968 review by Nicholson, which documented fetal outcome in 123 pregnancies in which chemotherapy had
been given. In the 58 cases in which such therapy was given in the second or third trimester, all the babies were born normal. In the 55
cases in which chemotherapy (other than with folic acid antagonists, as noted above) was given in the first trimester, only 4 babies were born with abnormalities.
As for radiation therapy during pregnancy, Wallach et al[18] noted a similar fetal
resistance to damage,
citing reviews from the 1970’s. They observed that the incidence of fetal abnormalities (mainly
microcephaly, or decreased brain size) was uncommon after 8 weeks gestation, and “extremely rare” after
30 weeks. Human data are scant, Wallach et al acknowledged[18], but they parallel the effects observed
experimentally in rodents.
Not surprisingly, a check of data from cases from more recent years reflects the steady improvement of
both fetal/neonatal care and breast cancer therapy. Last year, Dr. David Berry of Baylor College of
Medicine in Houston, Texas reported his own results to the International Congress on Breast
Diseases[19].
Over the previous 7 years, Dr. Berry had treated 22 pregnant breast cancer patients with chemotherapy.
Although 4 of the babies were born premature and a few had low birth weight, all are still healthy.
As for the mothers, 5 of the 7 who were treated over 5 years ago are still alive. Considering that these
women had stage 2 or 3 disease (i.e., the cancer had already spread beyond the breast), wherein 5-year
survival is only generally about 50%, Berry’s results are very encouraging. What is discouraging is the fact that these findings were even regarded as something new, something
that “now gives women another option” in the words of Dr. Berry, who observed that “current practice among many
doctors” includes a “demand” that the pregnancy be terminated (either by
abortion, by induction of labor at 28 weeks or more, or by waiting until a term delivery) before
offering chemotherapy.
One wonders when the standards of clinical practice will be updated to reflect the certainty of the
uselessness of “therapeutic abortion” that is so clearly reflected in the medical literature.
It was, after all, over 20 years ago that Dr. Donegan[14], in reference to the proven futility of “therapeutic
abortion”, passed on the then 15-year-old advice of Byrd et al. “that rather than concentrating on
terminating the pregnancy, physicians should direct their efforts toward terminating the cancer.”
-jb-
References cited
6 Gahr (1997) Wall St J:Aug. 21, p A14
7 Kent (1997) Redbook: May, pp 110-13;
140-2
8 McBride(1993) Am Health Dec pp 11-12
9 Petrek et al (1991) Cancer 67:869-72
10 Hornstein et al (1982) J Surg Oncol
21:179-82
11 White & White (1956) Ann Surg
144:384
12 Juret(1976)J Chir111:211-30(in French)
13 Schweppe et al (1980) Z Geburtshilfe
Perinatol 184:1-10 (in German)
14 Donegan (1977) Obstet Gynecol
50:244-52
15 Clark & Chua(1989)ClinOncol 1:11-18
16 Nugent etal(1985)Arch Surg 120:1221-4
17 Barber (1981) Obstet Gynecol
58:41S-47S
18 Wallach et al (1983) Curr Prob Cancer
VII:1-58
19 Susman (1996) UPI news report, May 1
|