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Women with ductal carcinoma in-situ
(DCIS) wrongly perceive that their risk
of disease recurrence and death is similar
to that of women with invasive breast cancer,
an intriguing study has found.
The research, by a team of Dutch oncologists,
included women diagnosed with DCIS or invasive
breast cancer (T1N0M0) in three hospitals in the
period 2002-2003. Questionnaires were sent to
all 180 women and returned by 135, giving a
75% response rate.
Scores on the Short-Form 36 (physical and mental
components) and the World Health Organization-5
index, which measures general wellbeing, were
similar between women with the two types of cancer.
However, those with DCIS felt their disease had
a less negative effect on their physical health,
sex life, and relationships with friends and
acquaintances than that perceived by women with
invasive breast cancer.
This was in spite of the DCIS group believing that
they were at similar risk of disease recurrence and
death as women with invasive disease.
In other unexpected findings, both groups of women
reported less bodily pain than did the general population,
and women with DCIS had better scores on the physical
component scale than the average Dutch woman of the same age.
"Our findings once more seem to suggest that being
diagnosed for DCIS or invasive breast cancer will
not just have a negative impact on the HRQL and
wellbeing," write Adri Voogd (Free University Amsterdam)
and fellow authors.
"The confrontation with DCIS or invasive breast cancer
rather paradoxically seems to have a generally positive impact."
Nevertheless, they stress the importance of informing
women with DCIS "with meticulous care" about the precise
nature of their disease and its very good prognosis
in order to prevent unnecessary worry and distress.
Eur J Cancer 2007; 43: 549-556
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