News > The Dobbs decision, one year later

The Dobbs decision, one year later

Twelve months after the US Supreme Court decision, we reflect on the impact the overturning of Roe v. Wade has had on women with breast cancer.

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This ruling overturned the 50-year precedent of Roe v. Wade and put decisions about a woman’s right to a safe medical abortion into the hands of state legislators. Today, we have ample evidence from physicians and women across the nation that confirms our fears. In the new legal landscape, evidence-based care is compromised, physicians are stymied, and women’s medical options are severely limited. We acknowledge not everyone shares our view, and we continue to stand with the majority of US doctors and medical groups that have deep concerns about the implications of this ruling.

On this anniversary of the Dobbs decision, I want to share with you what we have learned, through the stories doctors and women have shared with us.

Treatment obstacles and delays

Put yourself in the shoes of Tanya (we are not using her real name, per her request), a premenopausal woman who was diagnosed with de novo breast cancer metastases to the lung, liver, and brain. After having local therapy, she experiences a complete response to systemic treatment, showing no measurable disease for two years. Filled with hope, she falls in love and marries.

But at age 48, Tanya finds herself with an unplanned, unwanted pregnancy, living in a state where abortion is banned. Her highly effective treatment is potentially toxic to a fetus and could induce an abortion, so her doctor must stop it immediately. Tanya cannot afford travel to another state. For almost three months she is unable to receive the medication that has been keeping her cancer at bay. Finally, a legal solution is found, but Tanya has been without cancer treatment for one-quarter of a year, and both she and her doctor are profoundly worried about the consequences.

Dangerous trends come together

We at LBBC celebrate advances in medicine that have given many women the option to continue pregnancies and deliver healthy babies during breast cancer treatment. We spoke up for moms during the infant formula crisis. However, the overlapping trends of decreasing age at first breast cancer diagnosis and increasing age of childbearing have created a dangerous scenario. Cancer affects 1 in 1,000 pregnancies in the US, and approximately 1,500 women each year will have a breast cancer diagnosis and a pregnancy simultaneously.

In addition, many new and improved treatments—like targeted therapies for HER2-positive cancers and immunotherapies for triple-negative breast cancer—are toxic to fetuses. The gap between what can be done to save women, and what is safe to do during pregnancy, grows wider all the time.

The question now is: Who should decide what path a woman takes when optimal cancer care is in conflict with carrying a pregnancy to term?

We stand with patients

At LBBC, we believe in each person’s right to make medical decisions based on scientific evidence, with guidance from their healthcare team, steeped in their own beliefs, priorities, and values. Clear, transparent communication between patients and physicians deserves privacy and respect.

Over the past 12 months we have seen one state after another erect huge, sometimes insurmountable, barriers to safe medical abortion. LBBC Medical Advisory Board member Virginia F. Borges, MD, MMSc, director of the Young Women’s Breast Cancer Translational Program at the University of Colorado Cancer Center, told me that the wording of state statutes regarding legal exceptions for abortion is vague and confusing. Developed by legislators rather than physicians, these laws are not rooted in clinical knowledge that accounts for the long-term implications of altering cancer treatment. This leaves many physicians in “a state of chaos,” subject to ethical and legal uncertainties.

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With such uncertainty, clinicians will fear criminalization and may not act in the best interest of the patient.

Katherine Van Loon, MD, UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, in Cancer Therapy Advisor

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In states where abortion is outlawed, or permitted only during the weeks when most women are not even aware they are pregnant, many physicians fear for their licenses and their lives if they want to offer optimal cancer care to their patients.

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Current status of abortion laws by state

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Sources: US News and World Report, Guttmacher Institute, ProPublica, Center for Reproductive Rights, Accessed April 9, 2023
Credit: Map courtesy of Virginia F. Borges, MD, MMSc

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Dr. Borges and other physicians told me of situations in which trying to save the mother and bring the pregnancy to the point of viability ended in disaster for both. Or a baby was born, only to lose its mother to cancer in a matter of months.

Managing pregnancy during cancer treatment requires a specialized team of high-risk obstetric experts. Yet large portions of the nation have what Dr. Borges calls “maternal health deserts.” Society does not provide the type of comprehensive medical care for most women that these laws demand.

Choice is imperative, delay is deadly

As we enter the second year after Dobbs, LBBC continues to wholeheartedly support people’s ability to make decisions about their own bodies. We continue to believe that medical decisions are personal and private, to be made between people with cancer and their doctors. Of all the women who find themselves pregnant with breast cancer, 9-28% will choose to terminate the pregnancy (resources here). But confusion and delay do not benefit anyone. In fact, a 2020 meta-analysis showed that the mortality risk among patients with cancer increased by as much as 13% with every month that treatment was postponed.

Our organization has long been a leader in creating programs, services, and safe community spaces for young women impacted by breast cancer. We understand that, in the words of Dr. Borges, “therapeutic decision making for patients with breast cancer is complex and multidisciplinary, involving various modes of treatment including surgery, systemic therapies like chemotherapy and hormone suppression, and radiation.” We oppose any legislation or policy that is not based in science, respecting the rights, health, and well-being of every individual, and that interferes in the private communications between people and their physicians.

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