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Most women with breast cancer who survive beyond 10 years die of non-cancer causes

Survival rates for patients with breast cancer have improved significantly in the last four decades, and many patients will eventually die from non€“cancer-related causes.

Survival rates for patients with breast cancer have improved significantly in the last four decades, and many patients will eventually die from non-cancer-related causes.

The study published in CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society, conducted the largest population-based long-term retrospective analysis of non-cancer causes of death among patients with breast cancer.

Of 754,270 U.S. women diagnosed with breast cancer from 2000 to 2015, 24.3% died by the end of 2015. The highest number of deaths (46.2%) occurred within one to five years following diagnosis, and most were caused by breast cancer or other cancers. Breast cancer-related deaths decreased as years passed, however, and were eventually overcome by non-breast cancer causes of death.

Within five to 10 years following diagnosis, about half of patients died of non-breast cancer causes, whereas the majority of those who survived beyond 10 years died of non-breast cancer causes.

The most common non-cancer causes of death within 10 years of diagnosis were heart diseases, followed by cerebrovascular diseases. After more than 10 years following diagnosis, the most common non-cancer causes of death were heart diseases, followed by Alzheimer’s disease.

Breast cancer-related deaths decreased each year

Compared with the general population, patients had a higher risk of dying from chronic liver diseases within 5-10 years following diagnosis, and from Alzheimer’s disease and heart diseases after more than 10 years following diagnosis.

“Non-cancer diseases, such as heart diseases, contribute to a significant number of deaths in patients with breast cancer, even higher than in the general population,” said senior author Mohamad Bassam Sonbol, MD, of Mayo Clinic in Phoenix, Arizona. “Cancers other than breast cancer are also an important cause of death in patients with a history of breast cancer.”

The results will be informative for survivors in discussions with physicians about their future health. “Our findings emphasize the importance of counseling patients about their survivorship and risk of developing other cancers, with a focus on proper screening or preventive measures for other cancers and diseases,” added Dr. Sonbol.

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