What Happens When a Patient Develops a Secondary Cancer Years After Undergoing Treatment?

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CURECURE® Spring 2022

Although certain cancer treatments have been linked to an increased risk of a secondary cancer years later, an expert notes there are no genetic or pathologic studies that prove the association between new and previous cancers.

Michael Kimbarow was 13 years old in 1966 when he received a diagnosis of Hodgkin lymphoma. Doctors surgically removed a tumor within the parotid (salivary) gland on the left side of his face and applied radiation treatments to the area. He was then considered cancer-free and went on to live his life.

Nearly 40 years later, Kimbarow was working as a professor of communicative disorders and sciences at San Jose State University in California when one day, the left side of his face started to droop and became paralyzed.

A series of tests revealed a secondary cancer — a parotid tumor, which doctors thought was a late effect of the radiation he had received decades before. In contrast to the lymphoma that originated from lymphocytes in the parotid gland area, the second cancer arose from the parotid gland cells, likely induced by radiation.

“I was really just devastated to hear that I had another cancer,” says Kimbarow, now 69, “and I didn’t know at that point what all of the implications were.” But he continued to work while undergoing treatment, and a year later underwent reconstructive surgery to restore some facial symmetry.

New and Different Tumors From Treatments

Kimbarow’s experience is not isolated. Nearly 1 in 5 cancers diagnosed today occurs in an individual with a previous diagnosis of cancer, according to the National Cancer Institute.

The term “secondary cancers” can be confusing, explained Dr. Stephanie Schaub, an assistant professor of radiation oncology at the University of Washington in Seattle. She usually describes them to patients as “new and different tumors caused by treatments,” such as radiation, chemotherapy or targeted therapy. “That helps just emphasize to patients that it’s not their (original) tumor coming back.”

Treatments such as radiation or radioactive iodine (for thyroid cancer) are one known cause of secondary cancers. Chemotherapy can later lead to leukemias or other blood cancers. The hormonal therapy tamoxifen, used to treat breast cancers, increases the risk of developing uterine cancer later on. Despite associations such as these, the benefits of cancer treatment far outweigh the risk of developing secondary cancers, according to experts.

However, not all secondary cancers are caused by earlier treatment. Other risk factors include family history, or genetic predisposition. Certain racial and ethnic groups, such as Ashkenazi Jews, have a higher prevalence of mutations to the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes associated with breast, ovarian and pancreatic cancers. People with a family history of ovarian cancer may be at higher risk of developing the condition, too, as genetic mutations can be inherited. Some secondary cancers are unrelated to the initial cancer.

Age also plays a role. People like Kimbarow who are first diagnosed with cancer as a child or adolescent, or under age 45, are at a higher likelihood of experiencing a secondary cancer later, as the risk of cancer increases with age.

Exposure to environmental pollutants such as cigarette smoke is also a contributing factor. And some cancers themselves promote a higher risk of secondary cancer. People with chronic lymphocytic leukemia and non-Hodgkin lymphoma, for instance, have a higher than normal risk of developing other cancers such as skin cancers, says Dr. David A. Bond, a hematologist at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center in Columbus.

Overall, a decrease in the immune system associated with the initial cancer can increase the risk of developing a secondary cancer, explains Dr. Jennifer A. Woyach, a hematologist-oncologist at Ohio State. This is especially true in cases where the epithelium, the lining of the body’s tissues, is damaged, such as skin cancers associated with damage caused by ultraviolet light.

In general, secondary cancers take at least three to five years to develop, but the majority are seen years to decades after the initial diagnosis of a patient’s original tumor, Schaub says. The risk can depend on many factors such as younger age, genetic predisposition and treatments given for the original tumor.

If it’s genetic, each gene has its own peak in incidence for secondary cancer, mentions Dr. Siddartha Yadav, a breast and gynecologic cancer specialist at Mayo Clinic and an assistant professor of oncology at Mayo Clinic College of Medicine in Rochester, Minnesota.

Diagnosing Secondary Cancers

Adding complexity, it may not always be easy to tell if a new cancer that develops is related to treatment for the first cancer, says Schaub.

The biggest indicators are the type of new tumor that develops, coupled with the prior therapies received. If a teenager with Hodgkin lymphoma is treated with radiation to the chest and later develops a breast cancer within the area that received radiation, the new cancer is likely linked to treatment. However, no pathologic or genetic studies are available to date to prove the association between new and prior cancers, she explains.

That’s the case for Mary Lou Smith. Smith, who is over 70 and lives in the Chicago area, has survived three types of cancer. She received a diagnosis in her early 40s with early-stage ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) breast cancer and had a second DCIS 21 years later.

Smith had ovarian cancer about eight years after the second breast cancer, followed by colon cancer three years later. The breast and colon cancers were detected through routine screenings, and the ovarian cancer was found based on Smith reporting symptoms. After myriad treatments and follow-ups, Smith is considered as having no evidence of disease (NED). Two types of genetic testing found nothing to suggest she is at risk of developing cancers, but Smith finds it hard to believe she doesn’t have some genetic predisposition.

“When I got a second breast cancer, I was really angry,” she says. “In my head, I had done that … I was moving on. With the ovarian cancer, I was very frightened. I knew that was lethal, and by the time it’s found there’s not much to do except a lot of treatment. … With the colon cancer, I was just irritated to be honest. Like, really?”

Cynthia Chauhan says she took her secondary cancer as a sign to do new things. She left her job as a clinical social worker and took up rock climbing, drawing and painting.

Cynthia Chauhan says she took her secondary cancer as a sign to do new things. She left her job as a clinical social worker and took up rock climbing, drawing and painting.

Cynthia Chauhan, too, has had several bouts with cancer. Her first cancer was detected in 1998, when she was hospitalized for a surgical procedure and started having significant pain. Imaging tests revealed a tumor in the center of one of her kidneys. Cancer specialists at Mayo Clinic, where she was seen, surgically removed the kidney and continued to monitor her.

Three years later, while waiting to undergo a routine mammogram, Chauhan thought about an aunt who had died from inflammatory breast cancer. The next thing she knew, Chauhan herself was sitting down with a radiologist to discuss the findings, which had identified a DCIS breast cancer.

“It was scary,” says Chauhan, now 79, of Wichita, Kansas. “I (already) had been through a pretty rough sequence with the kidney cancer.” But she mentions she was not overwhelmed by the diagnosis because she felt she was in a good medical center for treatment and care.

Chauhan took her secondary cancer as a sign to do new things. She left her job as a clinical social worker and took up rock climbing, drawing and painting.

“Those are ways that allowed (me) to see myself differently,” she explains, and they enabled her to support herself emotionally while going through radiation treatment.

She also used visualization techniques, calling on her love of gardening. She began thinking of her breasts as a beautiful garden of flowers that had been invaded by a weed that needed removal. Today her status also is considered NED.

Change in the Tide

Kimbarow, Chauhan and Smith all say their doctors didn’t talk to them about their risk of developing secondary cancers. Cancer still had a lot of stigma attached to it in the 1960s, Kimbarow says: “It was still kind of whispered about. So we really didn’t talk too much about it.”

Smith recalls seeing information about secondary cancers in reading material given to her about the carboplatin and paclitaxel drugs she was prescribed for ovarian cancer.

“By that time it was like, ‘Oh well, what do you want me to do about that? I want to live today, so I’ll take a chance on five years down the road,’” she relates.

Fortunately, times are changing. Woyach and Schaub note that they discuss the risks of secondary cancer with their patients during the initial visit.

“I think sometimes people have this impression like, ‘I already have one cancer, so I don’t need to worry about something else. I have enough on my plate,’” Woyach says. “But it’s really important to continue other recommended, age-appropriate screenings.”

Depending on the type of treatments given, there may be adjusted screening recommendations to allow for earlier detection and/or prevention of secondary cancers, explains Schaub.

Throughout the cancer journey, whether secondary or primary, support and self-advocacy are crucial, Chauhan and Smith note.

“It’s important to have a caregiver who is very supportive and to understand that you are the most important person in your cancer care team,” Chauhan says. “You have a right and almost a responsibility to advocate for yourself, … to ask questions and to expect to get meaningful, understandable answers to those questions, and then to really focus on how you can best take care of yourself as you go through this.”

For example, back when Chauhan’s physician told her he was 98% sure she had kidney cancer and wanted her to schedule surgery the next day, Chauhan asked to hold off so she could do her own research, make a list of questions and have all her concerns answered before the procedure. “The surgeon reluctantly agreed,” she says.

Smith added her own advice: Make sure you attend all appointments for treatments and follow-up care and keep track of your health. “It is important to know your own body. If you feel there’s something
that isn’t going the way it should, then tell someone.”

Secondary cancers generally are diagnosed based on a patient’s symptoms or routine screenings and follow-up care. Oncologists monitor some cases more closely, Yadav points out, such as for patients who receive chemotherapies known to be associated with second cancers or who receive PARP inhibitor drugs associated with blood-based cancers.

Some secondary cancers identified early, such as skin cancers, are more likely to be curable and can be screened for easily, Woyach explains. But blood cancers such as myelodysplastic syndrome or acute leukemia tend to be more subtle and come on slowly, and don’t have as many screening tests.

Individualized Treatment Options

Treatment for secondary cancers generally is the same as for primary cancers, but there are times when oncologists have to consider additional options. Prior cancer therapies may have limited a patient’s reserves to tolerate a full dose of radiation therapy, Schaub says, or make it more difficult to perform surgery in a particular area. Chemotherapies also may be limited. One routinely used in breast cancer called doxorubicin should only be prescribed as a limited dose over a lifetime, according to Yadav. If a patient develops a secondary cancer for which the standard of care would be giving them the same drug, it becomes challenging.

“Really, it does become an individualized, thoughtful approach to patient care,” Schaub says. “There’s definitely no exact textbook (recommendation) for how to treat them.”

Kimbarow has been taking anti-cancer medications off and on since 2018 for lung tumors thought to be a metastasis from his 2006 parotid tumor. But he doesn’t worry about it or let it slow him down, saying he has two mantras: “The first is that I refuse to stop living before I die. And the second is that I’ve yet to read any scientifically peer-reviewed study that shows or demonstrates that sitting in a dark room feeling sorry for myself will improve my outcome. Until I do, there’s no point in it, so I just move forward day by day and enjoy it.”

Although no surefire way exists to prevent the development of subsequent cancers, cancer survivors can take steps to boost their health. Most important, mentions Woyach, is to undergo any recommended cancer screenings. Any young woman who had radiation to the chest under the age of 30 should be screened twice a year for breast cancer beginning eight years after completing radiation, using MRI and mammograms, notes Bond. Survivors of chronic lymphocytic leukemia and low-grade lymphomas should undergo skin cancer screenings at least annually, he says.

Also understand that if a patient has a genetic profile that increases their chance of developing a secondary cancer, they should be screened, Yadav says. If they haven’t had genetic testing, Yadav recommends they ask their oncologist if that might be right for them.

If there are no related genetics or family history, patients are advised to control other lifestyle and environmental factors. Experts advise patients the following: don’t smoke; limit sun exposure and use sunscreen; eat a healthy diet; increase consumption of fruits, vegetables and other vegetarian foods; and decrease consumption of meat.

Exercising also may reduce the recurrence of cancers, Yadav explains. “This can be just walking around … it does not have to be full cardio exercise, but it should be a minimum of one hour, three to four times a week,” he advises.

Cancer researchers are continuously working to develop newer treatments with fewer side effects while also trying to understand their association with risks for developing secondary cancers. Proton therapy, a newer form of external beam radiation therapy that minimizes radiation to healthy tissues surrounding a tumor, or immunotherapies that reinvigorate the body’s natural immune system to fight cancer eventually may be affiliated with fewer secondary cancers.

Research in breast and other cancers focuses on the genetic risk of developing secondary cancers, Yadav says. He also notes that over the past 20 years or so, scientists have found that genes such as ATM, CHEK2 and PALB2 cause breast cancer and are associated with secondary cancers. Current studies are looking to pinpoint what an individual’s risk is and what factors can modify that risk. Other studies are focused on the nature of secondary cancers and potential prevention.

“Right now, our recommendations are saying, ‘OK, if you’re genetically predisposed to developing ovarian cancer, we need to take the ovaries out,’” Yadav explains. “But are there other ways beyond doing surgeries? It’s not quite (at the point) where we can take certain medications and prevent secondary cancers … but that’s the goal.”

Kimbarow’s attitude has been so positive that his oncologist featured him as one of three patients in a talk on people who didn’t give up and showed remarkable response to treatment.

“Don’t stop living before your body gives out on you,” Kimbarow says. “You never know what the next therapy is that’s right around the corner. … The advances in science are amazing.”

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