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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Node-Negative Breast Cancer: Which Patients Should Be Treated?
Marcus Schmidtsubject
Oncologymedicine.medical_specialtyChemotherapybusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentReview Articlemedicine.diseaseSystemic therapySurgeryClinical trialchemistry.chemical_compoundBreast cancerOncologychemistryTrastuzumabInternal medicinePlasminogen activator inhibitor-1medicineSurgerybusinessPlasminogen activatorAdjuvantmedicine.drugdescription
Adjuvant systemic therapy has led to markedly improved outcome in early-stage breast cancer. However, the absolute gains from chemotherapy might be modest in node-negative patients. Adjuvant chemotherapy is the only option for triple-negative breast cancer patients and should be used with trastuzumab in HER2-positive patients. Considering the large group of patients with some degree of endocrine responsiveness, adding chemotherapy according to risk is an option. At present, we guide our therapeutic decisions using clinicopathologic risk classifications like the St. Gallen risk category or Adjuvant! online. A downside of these risk estimations is a low specificity and consequently the risk for overtreatment of a considerable number of patients. To spare patients unnecessary toxicities we need more reliable prognostic factors or tumor markers. From the plethora of tumor markers, only urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA)/plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1) and certain multiparameter gene expression assays are recommended by the American Society of Clinical Oncology. These tumor markers are presently investigated in clinical trials in node-negative breast cancer (NNBC-3, MINDACT, TAILORx). These studies will hopefully allow us to quantify the risk of progression in the individual patient and to tailor treatment accordingly. This should lead to a more personalized treatment recommendation.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2010-11-16 | Breast care (Basel, Switzerland) |