Apparently Receiving cancer treatment while pregnant does not result in health problems for unborn children, researchers have found.
Neither chemotherapy, radiotherapy nor surgery harmed the patients’ babies, according to a study.
Researchers have said that women who are diagnosed with cancer while pregnant should not delay their treatment.
Results show that fear of cancer treatment is no
reason to terminate a pregnancy, that maternal treatment should not be
delayed and that chemotherapy can be given.
‘The same study also shows that children suffer more from prematurity than from
chemotherapy, so avoiding prematurity is more important than avoiding
chemotherapy.’
A team examined 129 children born after exposure to cancer treatment in the womb.
The
data, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, found that the
babies - aged 18 months and then three years when they were tested - had
developed normally when compared to children whose mothers had not had
cancer.
Compared to
the control group of children, they found no significant differences in
mental development among children exposed to chemotherapy, radiotherapy,
surgery alone or no treatment.
‘Nor was the
number of chemotherapy cycles during pregnancy, which ranged from one
to ten, related to the outcome of the children.’
The most common cancers among the mothers were breast and haematological cancers, such as leukaemia and lymphoma.
Some
69 per cent of the children had been exposed to chemotherapy before
birth, 3.1 per cent radiotherapy, 5.4 per cent to both chemo and
radiotherapy, 10.1 per cent to surgery alone.
The
team also found that premature birth - a major cause of development
problems - was more frequent among children born to mothers with cancer,
regardless of whether or not they received treatment.
Prof Amant
said: ‘In most cases, they were born prematurely due to a medical
decision to induce preterm so as to continue cancer treatment after the
delivery.’
But he warned: ‘Our data include many types of chemotherapy, but we cannot guarantee that all types of chemotherapy are safe.
‘We
need to look at larger numbers of children and larger numbers exposed
to each drug in order to be able to document the potential effects of
individual drugs.’
Martin
Ledwick, head information nurse at Cancer Research UK, said: ‘Although
the results of the study seem encouraging, it’s important to acknowledge
that a range of chemotherapy drugs and other treatments were used on
the mothers so it may be hard to draw firm conclusions.
‘It’s
already known that some breast cancer drugs may be safe to give after
the first three months of pregnancy but it’s unclear from the study
which women fitted into this category.’
'Source: UK Daily Mail...
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