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Second Malignant Neoplasms: Assessment and Strategies for Risk Reduction
Abstract
Improvements in early detection,
supportive care, and treatment have resulted in an increasing number of
cancer survivors,
with a current 5-year relative survival rate for
all cancers combined of approximately 66.1%. For some patients, these
survival
advances have been offset by the long-term late
effects of cancer and its treatment, with second malignant neoplasms
(SMNs)
comprising one of the most potentially
life-threatening sequelae. The number of patients with SMNs is growing,
with new SMNs
now representing about one in six of all cancers
reported to the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology,
and
End Results (SEER) Program. SMNs reflect not only
the late effects of therapy but also the influence of shared etiologic
factors
(in particular, tobacco and excessive alcohol
intake), genetic susceptibility, environmental exposures, host effects,
and
combinations of factors, including gene-environment
interactions. For selected SMNs, risk is also modified by age at
exposure
and attained age. SMNs can be categorized into
three major groups according to the predominant etiologic factor(s): (1)
treatment-related,
(2) syndromic, and (3) those due to shared
etiologic exposures, although the nonexclusivity of these groups should
be underscored.
Here we provide an overview of SMNs in survivors of
adult-onset cancer, summarizing the current, albeit limited, clinical
evidence with regard to screening and prevention,
with a focus on the provision of guidance for health care providers. The
growing number of patients with second (and
higher-order) cancers mandates that we also further probe etiologic
influences
and genetic variants that heighten risk, and that
we better define high-risk groups for targeted preventive and
interventional
clinical strategies.
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