乳腺癌与妊娠。

Major problems in clinical surgery Pub Date : 1979-01-01
W L Donegan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在绝经前妇女中,新诊断的乳腺癌中约有7%伴有怀孕,大多数患者处于生命的第四个十年。这些患者的预后,以及那些在怀孕后不久就被诊断出癌症的患者,通常比未怀孕的女性更不利,但如果年龄和疾病分期相当,怀孕本身对预后的影响很小。乳房切除术对怀孕患者和其他人一样有效,自然流产的机会很小。治疗性流产并不能提高临床上局限性癌症患者的治愈机会。晚期或播散性乳腺癌的有效内分泌治疗或化疗确实需要治疗性流产,早期妊娠最好立即终止。对于近期妊娠,决定在很大程度上取决于患者想要孩子的愿望。除非治疗需要是紧急的,否则干预通常可以暂时推迟,而不会使患者的病情显著恶化。乳房切除术后的怀孕对持续的健康几乎没有影响,只要患者在临床上没有癌症,中断它们就不会有治疗上的好处。未来怀孕的决定应该个体化,适当考虑到复发的风险和在合理年轻的时候完成家庭的愿望。乳腺癌治疗的进展部分取决于人们认识到癌症确实发生在怀孕和哺乳期,最好及早诊断,而且是可治愈的。怀孕既不应妨碍及时诊断,也不应延误最终治疗。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mammary carcinoma and pregnancy.

Among premenopausal women approximately 7 per cent of newly diagnosed breast cancers are accompanied by pregnancy, with most patients being in the fourth decade of life. The prognosis of these patients, and of those whose cancers are diagnosed soon after pregnancy, is generally less favorable than that of nonpregnant females, but if age and stage of disease are comparable, pregnancy per se has little influence upon prognosis. Mastectomy is as effective for pregnant patients as for others and the chance of spontaneous abortion is small. Therapeutic abortion does not improve the chances for cure of patients with clinically localized cancer. Effective endocrine therapy or chemotherapy for advanced or disseminated breast cancer does require therapeutic abortion, and an early pregnancy is best terminated without delay. For pregnancies near term the decision depends greatly upon the desire of the patient for a child. Unless therapeutic needs are urgent, intervention can often be delayed temporarily without significant deterioration of the patient. Pregnancies subsequent to a mastectomy have little bearing upon continued well-being, and as long as the patient is clinically free of cancer no therapeutic benefit can be expected from interrupting them. A decision for future pregnancies should be individualized with due regard for the risk of recurrence and the desirability of completing one's family while still reasonably young. Progress with the treatment of breast cancer depends in part upon the appreciation that cancers do occur during pregnancy and lactation, that they are best diagnosed early and that they are curable. Pregnancy should neither deter a prompt diagnosis nor delay definitive treatment.

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