Study: Surgery may not benefit women with topical channel cancer
Initial results from a medical study confirmed that surgical intervention may not benefit most women with topical channel cancer, a low -risk -type breast cancer, to support the opinions of researchers for a long time. Data presented in the US state of Texas to the “San Antonio Breast Cancer Forum” that women diagnosed with the disease were repeatedly followed by X -Ray photography, they had no possibilities to develop the disease in the next two years to remove cancer cells, compared to women undergoing surgeries. In topical cancer cancer, often called zero breast cancer, cancer cells are located within milk channels, but it is not always spread faster. Local channel cancer in the United States alone, local channel cancer affects more than 50,000 women every year. Almost everyone is subject to surgical intervention, and a large number of them export mammals. The study included 957 women with topical channel cancer, who were randomly distributed to two groups, the first of the operation, while the second intensive monitoring underwent. Two years later, the rate of fast distribution of cancer in the surgery group reached 5.9%, compared to 4.2% in the active monitoring group, a difference that, according to the study report, has no statistical significance. The doctor, the doctor, said: E. Chile Huang, from the Duke Institute for Cancer in Durham, North Carolina, in a statement: “These results may be exciting for sick women, but it is clear that we need more long -term follow -up.” “If these results persist over time, most women suffering from this type of low -risk disease will have the option to avoid surgical treatment. It will fully change how patients care and reflect on this disease.”