5 promising new goals for breast cancer awareness month

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Page 1: 5 Promising New Goals for Breast Cancer Awareness Month

5 Promising New Goals for Breast Cancer Awareness

MonthKathleen HoffmanMedivizor.com

Page 2: 5 Promising New Goals for Breast Cancer Awareness Month

How did the Breast Cancer Awareness

Month Begin?

Page 3: 5 Promising New Goals for Breast Cancer Awareness Month

The American Cancer Society and Imperial Chemical Industries (now

AstraZeneca) founded October as National Breast Cancer Awareness Month in

1985. The Awareness goal? Promoting mammography as a screening tool to

“fight” breast cancer.

In a recent study, seventy-eight percent (78%) of women agreed that

mammography should be conducted (in addition to health care provider exams

and self-exams). It seems that many women are aware of mammograms.

Perhaps it’s time for new objectives.

Page 4: 5 Promising New Goals for Breast Cancer Awareness Month

New Breast Cancer Awareness Goals

Page 5: 5 Promising New Goals for Breast Cancer Awareness Month

1- Awareness of What “Cured” MeansThere is much confusion about “the cure.” In a video by MetaVivor, Cece Curry shared her experience,

“They called me cured, that’s what they told me…so I didn’t think that it would ever come back….I think it is a

good idea for them not to use that word anymore…even if it’s as early as stage 1 or 0.”

Cece died of metastatic breast cancer on June 1, 2013.

In medical language, someone is “cured” of cancer if they survive without a relapse for 5 years after completion of

treatment. For some cancers, “cure” is living for 10 years without relapse or spread of cancer to other organs.

Page 6: 5 Promising New Goals for Breast Cancer Awareness Month

2- 1 in 5 people diagnosed with breast cancer, will relapseSo, when organizations say they are raising money for “the cure” of breast cancer, what does this mean? Are they

raising money to cure breast cancer?

After 30 years of mammogram awareness, although there is some variability, the conservative figure for relapse is 1

in 5 or 20%.

The European Society of Medical Oncology states that “Approximately 5% to 10% of breast cancers are metastatic

at diagnosis; of these, approximately one-fifth will survive 5 years. Depending on prognostic factors, up to 30% of

node-negative and up to 70% of node-positive breast cancers will relapse.”

The sad fact is that these figures remain unchanged even though millions have been spent over the last 30 years

since the first Breast Cancer Awareness Month.

Page 7: 5 Promising New Goals for Breast Cancer Awareness Month

3- Men Get Breast Cancer TooBreast cancer is not just a woman’s disease, even though pink is its color. Pink, before WWII, was the color for boys, according to Jo B. Paoletti, a historian at the University of Maryland. In the 1980s, pink became a feminine color.

The culture of pink and femininity pervades breast cancer-to the point that even breast cancer medical centers are colored pink. Yet men get breast cancer too.

Page 8: 5 Promising New Goals for Breast Cancer Awareness Month

4-More Research On Metastases Is Needed

“What do they mean by the cure?…they never say preventing death from stage 4 disease…they say we’re going to cure it

by preventing it and detecting it early.”~Dian Corneliussen

Since people die of metastatic disease, the only way to cure breast cancer is to learn about metastases and metastatic breast

cancer. New directions in precision medicine hold promise. Precision medicine is defined as, “A form of medicine that uses

information about a person’s genes, proteins, and environment to prevent, diagnose, and treat disease.”

One exciting trend in this area of research is the study of Exceptional Responders to cancer therapies. This type of work looks

at the genetic profile of cancers of these Exceptional Responders to find out why they were cured. Once researchers know

this, they match cancers of other people that have the same genetic profile as the cancer that is cured.

Cancers of different organs can have the same genetic profile. So a drug that cures someone of thyroid cancer can potentially

be used to cure someone else of ovarian cancer. This is what the Exceptional Responders Initiative looks for.

Page 9: 5 Promising New Goals for Breast Cancer Awareness Month

A new project“If you have metastatic breast cancer, join a nationwide movement of patients, doctors, and scientists by sharing your tumor samples, your medical information, and your voice. Together, we can speed the development of future therapies.” -MBCProject

Breast Cancer Awareness Research on Exceptional Responders is being built into a project on metastatic breast cancer. Corrie Painter,PhD is one of the leaders of a project that brings the metastatic breast cancer community of patients, together with geneticists researchers at the Broad Institute and cancer researchers at Dana Farber Cancer Institute. The project, The #MBCProject, stands for metastatic breast cancer and it is designed to accelerate discoveries and treatments for breast cancer metastases through understanding genomics. The project is being done in partnership with advocacy groups like the Metastatic Breast Cancer Alliance, the Metastatic Breast Cancer Network, the Avon Foundation, Living Beyond Breast Cancer, the Young Survival Coalition, and the Inflammatory Breast Cancer Research Foundation.

Email [email protected] or go to their website to participate.

Page 10: 5 Promising New Goals for Breast Cancer Awareness Month

5- Cause Marketing” Awareness: What It Is and What It May DoAccording to the Business Dictionary cause marketing is the “Joint funding and promotional strategy in which a firm’s sales are linked (and a percentage of the sales revenue is donated) to a charity or other public cause. However, unlike philanthropy, money spent in cause related marketing is considered an expense and is expected to show a return.”

The definition above explains why buying products that are pink from companies may not be as good as making a donation.

The phrase “expected to show a return” means that in some way, the company selling the product is expected to make a

profit from it.

People have been buying pink items because they think their money is going to the cure for cancer. Unfortunately, much of

the money is not going to research. Survivors and their families have started campaigns, like “Think Before You Pink.”

Organizations like this raise awareness about breast cancer marketing and its potential pitfalls. Be sure you understand the

scope of donations to breast cancer support and research organizations if you purchase a “pink” product. If in doubt, don’t be

afraid to ask questions about where raised funds actually go.

Page 11: 5 Promising New Goals for Breast Cancer Awareness Month

THANK YOU