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Future
Risk for Survivors
Certain patients face greater possibility for a second cancer.
By Rabiya Tuma, PhD
Lori Sklar was diagnosed with aggressive stage 1 breast
cancer in October 2003. Her doctors recommended a mastectomy
and four months of chemotherapy. Everything looked good until
April 2004. She had accompanied her husband Bill on a business
trip to New Orleans but found herself exceedingly tired, quickly
winded and bruising easily. When they returned home to Boca
Raton, Florida, Lori immediately went to see her oncologist.
He confirmed her suspicion of cancer: She had acute myeloid
leukemia.
Before she started treatment for breast cancer, Lori and
Bill were told the chemotherapy regimen of Adriamycin®
(doxorubicin), Taxol® (paclitaxel) and Cytoxan® (cyclophosphamide)—a
regimen that would best control her breast cancer—could,
in rare cases, cause leukemia by damaging the DNA of bone
marrow stem cells. But neither the doctors nor the Sklars
dwelled on the risk. After all, the statistics were in their
favor since only about one-tenth of 1 percent of breast cancer
patients treated with chemotherapy and/or radiation develop
acute myeloid leukemia. But statistics don’t always
count. She became that 0.1 percent.
Following her new diagnosis, Lori started back on chemotherapy—this
time to treat leukemia. After numerous rounds of chemotherapy
followed by brief periods of response and then relapses, Lori
underwent a bone marrow transplant in the fall of 2005. She
is now recuperating and devoting herself to community service,
including her website designed for hereditary breast cancer
survivors (www.reachglobal.org).
Lori’s experience of a second cancer is not unique
among cancer survivors. Indeed, survivors accounted for 16
percent of the new cancer diagnoses in 2003. Some chemotherapy
drugs and radiation used to treat a first cancer can cause
DNA damage and thus increase an individual’s risk of
developing a second cancer.
While three large studies involving more than a million
patients total indicate that adult cancer survivors have almost
twice the risk of having a second cancer as healthy controls,
it’s more complicated than that. The total risk for
the population is misleading, say experts, because the actual
risk of a second cancer differs among survivors and is influenced
by numerous factors, including the type of primary cancer,
age at diagnosis, type of treatment received, genetics and
environmental influences. Additionally, several studies have
found that people diagnosed with their first cancer after
the age of 50 are not at greater risk for another cancer than
people who have never had cancer, says Charles Sklar, MD,
director of the Long Term Follow-Up Program at Memorial Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Center in New York. (Dr. Sklar and Lori and Bill Sklar
are not related.)
The causes of second cancers also vary from one survivor
to the next. Some cases are related to treatment for their
first cancer, sometimes referred to as secondary cancers.
In other cases, a survivor may have a genetic predisposition
that makes them more likely to develop malignancies than the
general population (see sidebar). Finally, some of the cancers
that survivors experience are sporadic cancers, of which the
likelihood increases as a person ages, just as it does for
people who have never had a cancer diagnosis.
Young Survivors
The issue of second cancers has been better characterized
in pediatric cancer survivors, in part because curative therapies
for pediatric cancers have been around longer than for adult
cancers, says Smita Bhatia, MD, a second cancers specialist
and associate director of the City of Hope Comprehensive Cancer
Center in California. Additionally, pediatric oncologists
are keenly aware that their patients have a lot of growing
cells and tissues that could be damaged by anticancer therapies.
In a study of 13,581 individuals who were diagnosed with
their first cancer before age 21 and survived at least five
years, about 3 percent developed a second cancer during a
20-year follow-up period. That rate is approximately six times
higher than for the population at large, which sounds extraordinarily
high, but only leads to 1.9 extra cancers per 1,000 individuals
in the study. “The risk for the overall population of
cancer survivors is not large,” says Dr. Bhatia.
As with adult cancers, the risk for pediatric survivors is
not distributed equally. Females are at a higher risk than
males, and patients diagnosed at a younger age are at higher
risk than those diagnosed later. Survivors of pediatric soft-tissue
sarcomas, Hodgkin’s disease and hereditary retinoblastoma
are most likely to experience a second cancer. Though it is
not yet obvious what predisposes sarcoma survivors to a second
cancer, risk factors have been identified for Hodgkin’s
disease survivors that explain some of the secondary cancers
seen in this group.
In the case of hereditary retinoblastoma, the excess risk
results from an interaction between an individual’s
genetic makeup and environmental experiences, including radiation
therapy. The retinoblastoma gene normally helps suppress tumor
formation throughout the body, so individuals who carry a
mutation in the gene frequently develop tumors in both eyes
before age 5. Because they lack that tumor suppressor activity,
an estimated 25 percent of these individuals will have a second
cancer diagnosis within the next 50 years of life. If they
receive radiation therapy for their original retinoblastoma
tumors, that risk doubles to 50 percent. Because researchers
have found this link, Dr. Sklar says most oncologists no longer
treat hereditary retinoblastoma with radiation.
When Steven Zachary (Zach) Sochor was 29 months old, he
started complaining that his eye was “broken,”
and his mother, Zoe Sochor could see him making an effort
to focus. Zach was found to have one retinoblastoma tumor
in each eye, indicating hereditary retinoblastoma. He was
treated with six weeks of external beam radiation, which stopped
the cancer in the left eye, but the cancer in his right eye
continued to grow. In May of 1995, when Zach was just shy
of his fifth birthday, the doctors removed Zach’s right
eye.
Since that time, he has worn a prosthesis regularly and without
complaint. But in 2004 he noticed his prosthesis no longer
fit quite right. From April through June, the family and various
doctors tried to figure out what was wrong, hoping initially
that it was a bad flare-up of his springtime allergies. “An
ill-fitting prosthesis is a symptom of second cancer,”
says Zoe. “But even though you know that, it doesn’t
come to the forefront of your mind right away—even though
the possibility is with you all the time.”
Finally, one of the doctors saw a lump in Zach’s eye
socket that hadn’t been there during a recent examination.
The lump turned out to be a malignant fibrous histiocytoma
that was growing toward Zach’s brain, a tumor most likely
induced by the radiation used to treat Zach’s retinoblastoma
10 years earlier. After six heavy-duty rounds of chemotherapy,
six weeks of radiation and a 14-hour surgery, Zach is in remission
and doing regular ninth-grade stuff, including snowboarding.
“I always wear my helmet and my goggles,” says
Zach, who is well aware he needs to protect his one good eye.
“Plus it looks cool because I have sweet goggles.”
Why Second Cancers Happen
In both adult and pediatric survivors, most of the risk
for treatment-related second cancers has been associated with
radiation therapy and select chemotherapy agents. Thus far,
there are two types of drugs implicated in causing second
cancers: topoisomerase II inhibitors, such as VePesid®
(etoposide) and anthracyclines like Adriamycin, and alkylating
agents, including Cytoxan. Each of these treatments damage
DNA in the tumor cells and can cause mutations in rapidly
dividing cells in the body, leaving the patient at risk for
new malignancies.
The chemotherapies are associated with leukemias and lymphomas,
which frequently occur within one to 10 years after therapy.
By contrast, radiation is the major risk factor for solid
tumors, which almost always form within the radiation-exposed
area. The delay between treatment and solid tumor development
is longer than for blood cancers, with many solid tumors arising
more than 10 years beyond therapy, and the risk continues
to climb 15 years after exposure.
Researchers are beginning to understand how and when these
therapies cause problems. For example, young girls and women
under 30 who receive chest radiation for Hodgkin’s disease
are more likely to have breast cancer later in life, relative
to women who never had such therapy. For this reason, physicians
now avoid using radiation therapy in these patients.
“This sort of information definitely feeds back into
current treatment,” says Dr. Sklar. “For cancers
where the prognosis is very good and there are multiple agents
that can be used for treatment, avoiding the ones with serious
toxicities is clearly the way to go. Unfortunately for many
malignancies, the outlook is not very good and the available
drugs or modalities are limited.” In those cases, the
risks have to be tolerated.
One of the main questions facing researchers today is why
some patients develop treatment-related tumors, while the
majority do not. If scientists can determine what makes one
person sensitive to the negative effects of therapy, they
can avoid using that treatment for those individuals. In some
cases, it seems risk is associated with genetic factors, while
other cases point to environmental factors. The environmental
ones can be controlled and already allow survivors to take
steps toward prevention. For example, some researchers think
that pediatric cancer survivors who smoke increase their risk
of a second cancer, and survivors who received radiation therapy
are at increased risk of skin cancer and sun exposure exacerbates
the problem.
As researchers learn more about what causes second cancers,
they are working to find ways to intervene. In the case of
genetic syndromes they are looking for ways to preempt the
problem, like using prophylactic mastectomies to reduce the
risk of breast cancer in BRCA mutation carriers. And in the
case of treatment-related disease, they are working to modify
or reduce an individual’s exposure. A good example of
this has been the effort to narrow the radiation field and
reduce radiation doses, which damage a smaller area of tissue
and thereby reduce the risk of a new cancer.
The important thing for survivors, Dr. Bhatia says, is to
know his or her risks based on what therapies they had and
have regular follow-ups with a qualified physician and undergo
recommended screenings, so if something does develop, it can
be dealt with quickly. While it’s important to use therapies
that do not increase the risk of second cancers, doctors and
patients agree that the bottom line is to cure the first cancer.
Reprinted with permission from CURE: Cancer Updates, Research,
& Education. CURE provides the latest in cancer information
for patients and their caregivers free of charge. To sign
up for CURE, go to www.curetoday.com.
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