Avoiding Chemotherapy

By Renee Tessman, KARE-11 News

February 19, 2013 Updated Feb 18, 2013 at 8:49 PM PDT

(KARE) A new study analyzing a test that determines who does or doesn't need chemotherapy shows the process is highly accurate.

When you hear cancer treatment, you think of chemo, but doctors say some breast cancer patients can go without it.

Diagnosed with early stage breast cancer, Rachel Klein, of New Hope, had a double mastectomy last fall, but no chemotherapy. A genomic test called MammaPrint told her she didn't need it.

"It's a blessing to be able to survive and to be able to live your life," Klein said.

The study published in the International Journal of Cancer has shown that 97% of women, who were determined to be low risk through the MammaPrint test and therefore didn't need chemo, have lived beyond the five-year mark.

Dr. Michaela Tsai is a medical oncologist with Minnesota Oncology.

"It's huge. I think chemotherapy is the part of breast cancer and all cancer treatment that patients fear the most," she said.

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