News

USPSTF breast cancer chemoprevention recommendations: We’re in this together


 

FROM ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE

The use of risk-reducing medications is quite low, but that’s because only about 5% of women are really appropriate candidates and only a minority of these actually take the medication, Dr. Ebell said.

Just 12% of high-risk women opted to take tamoxifen to reduce their risk for breast cancer in a national survey highlighted by the task force, with 77% of women declining primarily because of concerns about serious adverse events and small therapeutic benefit (Arch. Intern. Med. 2006;166:2260-5).

Further, only 27% of the 350 primary care physicians surveyed had prescribed tamoxifen for breast cancer prevention at least once in the prior 12 months.

"We do need to engage the primary care community more broadly, not just ob.gyns., in this informed decision-making and make sure they are comfortable and confident when they have a patient with questions about chemoprevention," Dr. Ebell said.

Dr. Ebell reported having no financial disclosures.

pwendling@frontlinemedcom.com

Pages

Recommended Reading

Abbreviated MRI breast cancer screening protocol accurate
MDedge Internal Medicine
Novel DNA biomarkers predicted prostate cancer return
MDedge Internal Medicine
Selenium disappoints for secondary prevention in NSCLC
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA advisory panel backs approval of neoadjuvant pertuzumab for breast cancer
MDedge Internal Medicine
Lung cancer diagnosis aided by novel plasma protein
MDedge Internal Medicine
Fear, anxiety drive contralateral mastectomy, survey finds
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA approves first generic capecitabine
MDedge Internal Medicine
Colorectal cancer screening cuts long-term mortality
MDedge Internal Medicine
Hospice usage up but not delivered soon enough, study finds
MDedge Internal Medicine
Breast cancer receptor change may predict outcomes
MDedge Internal Medicine