Pregnant women can receive breast cancer chemotherapy without endangering health of their babies
Women who discover they have breast cancer while they
are pregnant can be treated with chemotherapy without endangering the health of
their unborn baby, according to research presented at the seventh European Breast
Cancer Conference (EBCC7) in Barcelona, Spain.
Dr. Sibylle Loibl, Assistant Professor in Obstetrics
and Gynaecology at the University of Frankfurt, Germany, and a member of the German
Breast Group, told the conference that pregnant breast cancer patients can be
treated as close as possible to standard recommendations because chemotherapy
delivered while babies were in the womb did not appear to cause the babies significant
problems at or after birth.
"Until now, the evidence upon which we based our
decisions about how to treat pregnant women with breast cancer has been largely
limited to case studies and retrospective investigations. For this reason doctors
have tended to be cautious in their approach to treatment because of fears about
the effect it might have on the fetus, even though it meant that women did not
necessarily receive the best treatment for their cancer," said Dr. Loibl.
"Therefore, the German Breast Group set up a registry to collect data both
retrospectively and prospectively from patients who have been diagnosed with breast
cancer during pregnancy. It is the only international registry to focus on the
outcomes of both the mother and the baby."
The researchers entered details of 235 patients prospectively
(119) and retrospectively (116) to the registry between April 2003 and October
2009. The ages of the women ranged between 23 and 46 with a median age of 33.
Breast cancer was diagnosed, on average, at 23 weeks into the pregnancy. Not all
the data are complete yet, but out of 151 women, 91 received an average of two
cycles of chemotherapy while they were pregnant.
The average gestational age of the babies at the time
of delivery was 36 weeks, ranging between 28 and 42 weeks. Babies that were exposed
to chemotherapy during pregnancy were born slightly lighter than babies who were
not: an average of 2636mg, compared to 2791mg.
Of the 91 babies exposed to chemotherapy, three were
born with alopecia, one was small for gestational age, one had trisomia 18 and
died one week after birth, one had necrotic enterocolitis and died three weeks
after birth, one developed sepsis) one developed neutropenia and two had anemia.
Of the 60 babies who were not exposed to chemotherapy, one had temporary apnea,
one had an increase in C reactive protein and one had gastroenteritis.
Dr. Loibl said: "Most of the problems described
in the babies exposed to chemotherapy were not related to the treatment but were
most probably due to other circumstances (for instance, necrotic enterocolitis
due to preterm delivery or trisomia 18). Normally, in nature, there is a risk
of malformations of between one and two percent, and other problems such as infection
can happen. The fetal outcomes of these babies that received chemotherapy were
not significantly different from those who did not.
"Therefore, this study suggests that pregnant breast
cancer patients can be treated as close as possible to standard recommendations
and receive chemotherapy, if it is indicated, while they are pregnant. Ideally,
this should take place in the care of specialized, multidisciplinary teams. We
would like to generate more robust data to confirm this and so the registry is
continuing and we are updating and completing the data."
In addition to the data on outcomes for mothers and babies,
Dr. Loibl and her colleagues are also collecting tumor specimens and placenta
material from the women who are being followed prospectively, and these are sent
to the German Breast Group's biomaterial bank. The researchers hope that this
will give them important information in the future about the effects of pregnancy
and chemotherapy on outcomes for mothers and babies.
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