Calgary Herald

Cancer patients test cold caps

- LAURAN NEERGAARD

WASHINGTON — The first time Miriam Lipton had breast cancer, her thick locks fell out two weeks after starting chemothera­py. The second time breast cancer struck, Lipton gave her scalp a deep chill and kept much of her hair — making her fight for survival seem a bit easier.

Hair loss is one of chemothera­py’s most despised side-effects, not because of vanity but because it fuels stigma, revealing to the world an illness that many would rather keep private.

“I didn’t necessaril­y want to walk around the grocery store answering questions about my cancer,” recalled Lipton, 45, of San Francisco. “If you look OK on the outside, it can help you feel, ‘OK, this is manageable, I can get through this.’”

Now U.S. researcher­s are about to put an experiment­al hair-preserving treatment to a rigorous test: To see if strapping on a cap so cold it numbs the scalp during chemo, like Lipton did, really works well enough to be used widely in the United States, as it is in Europe and Canada.

Near-freezing temperatur­es are supposed to reduce blood flow in the scalp, making it harder for cancer-fighting drugs to reach and harm hair follicles.

But while several types of cold caps are sold around the world, the Food and Drug Administra­tion hasn’t approved their use in the U.S.

Scalp cooling is an idea that’s been around for decades, but it never caught on here in part because of a concern: Could the cold prevent chemothera­py from reaching any stray cancer cells lurking in the scalp?

“Do they work and are they safe? Those are the two big holes. We just don’t know,” said American Cancer Society spokeswoma­n Kimberly Stump-Sutliff, an oncology nurse who said studies abroad haven’t set- tled those questions. “We need to know.”

To Dr. Hope Rugo of the University of California, San Francisco, the impact of hair loss has been overlooked, even belittled, by health providers.

She’s had patients delay crucial treatment to avoid it, and others whose businesses suffered when clients saw they were sick and shied away.

With more people surviving cancer, “we need to make this experience as tolerable as possible, so there’s the least baggage at the end,” Rugo said.

“Quite frankly, it’s the first or second question out of most patients’ mouths when I tell them I recommend chemothera­py. It’s not, ‘Is this going to cure me? It’s, ‘Am I going to lose my hair?’” adds Dr. Susan Melin of North Carolina’s Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center.

Later this summer, Rugo and Melin, along with researcher­s at a few other hospitals in New York and California, will begin enrolling 110 early-stage breast cancer patients in a study of the DigniCap brand of scalp cooling. The tight-fitting, insulated cap is attached to a cooling machine to stay around a shivery 5 C as patients undergo chemo. Participan­ts’ hair will be photograph­ed for experts to assess, and they’ll be compared with a small group of similarly ill patients who get chemo alone.

Lipton was among 20 U.S. patients who pilot-tested the DigniCap in 2011, most of whom kept more than half of their hair. Lipton’s thinned quite a bit at the crown, where the cap didn’t fit snugly. But because her bangs and surroundin­g hair remained, the mother of two covered the thinning area with a headband, not a wig. The side-effect: Pain and a headache as the cold set in.

“It wasn’t perfect, but it was easier,” said Lipton, who’s healthy today.

“I felt normal much more quickly.”

 ?? The Associated Press/files ?? Oncologist Dr. Hope Rugo, right, puts a DigniCap system on Katherine Serrurier, a research assistant.
The Associated Press/files Oncologist Dr. Hope Rugo, right, puts a DigniCap system on Katherine Serrurier, a research assistant.

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