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PRESS RELEASE
February 03, 2006
CONTACT: Hydi Miller of National Research Center for Women & Families,
202-223-4000, or hm@center4research.org
Breast Cancer Survivors Making Surgery Decisions With Limited Information, Says New Report;
Former Director of FDA Office on Women's Health Speaks at Release of 'Decisions in the Dark'
Breast cancer survivors who undergo reconstructive surgery using
silicone implants have access to very little research-based information
about the likely risks, according to a report
released today by the National Research Center (NRC) for Women &
Families. Dr. Susan Wood, former director of the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration's (FDA) Office of Women, was a speaker at a National
Press Club Newsmakers' event where the report was released.
Decisions in
the Dark: The FDA, Breast Cancer Survivors, and Silicone Implants
warns that industry-funded data indicates that reconstructive surgery
patients experience substantially more complications, ruptures and a
greater need for additional corrective surgeries than women who receive
implants for augmentation purposes. The report also highlights FDA research
showing that silicone implants interfere with mammography and may limit
future breast cancer treatment options such as lumpectomy and sentinel
node biopsy.
The report reveals that:
* After selling silicone breast implants to tens of thousands of
mastectomy patients in the last 5 years, under the conditions that they
participate in clinical trials, implant manufacturer Implant included
only 80 mastectomy patients in their longitudinal safety study submitted
to the FDA, and Mentor Corporation included 0 breast cancer patients in
their only long-term study;
* Industry-funded research reveals that reconstruction patients experience
two to three times as many complications and additional surgeries as
augmentation patients;
* Most ruptures (86 percent) are "silent" and can only be detected with
MRIs, yet Inamed included less than 30 women in their sample of breast
cancer patients undergoing MRIs to determine rupture rates, and the
medical societies for plastic surgeons do not advise women to undergo
MRIs.
* Research consistently indicates that reconstruction patients are not
enjoying life more than mastectomy patients without reconstruction, and
there is evidence they may be more likely to commit suicide; and
* Breast implants can limit treatment options for later
breast cancer.
"For a woman to survive breast cancer and then find herself facing additional surgeries because of a poorly tested product is terribly unfair," said Dr. Diana Zuckerman, President of the National Research Center for Women & Families, and author of the report. "It's critical that implant manufacturers include breast cancer survivors in their research, and that they carefully test for any adverse health impacts that occur over the lifetime of these devices."
"It is disturbing that the FDA would consider approving these devices despite the lack of data for breast cancer patients," said Dr. Susan Wood, former director of the FDA's Office of Women's Health.
The report focuses on the lack of adequate short- or long-term clinical data being provided to the FDA by implant manufacturers for all breast cancer patients. However, those least represented in the current research are women of color, such as African American, Asian and Hispanic breast cancer patients.
"We have good reason to believe the medical experiences of these women differ from those of white patients," said Bettye Green, RN, President of African American Women in Touch and a breast cancer survivor and nationally- respected advocate who spoke at the event. "Women need better information about implants and their long-term safety and effectiveness so that they can make informed choices about the risks of reconstructive surgery."
Pam Noonan-Sarceni, a breast cancer survivor, said she would not have chosen silicone implants had she known years ago what she knows now. "I trusted my doctors when they told me the implants were safe and would last forever."
The report was released at a National Press Club Newsmaker event today, sponsored by the National Research Center (NRC) for Women & Families. NRC is a nonpartisan, nonprofit research and education organization that works to improve policies and programs that affect the health and safety of women, children and families.
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