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New study calls for continued, aggressive treatment for breast cancer in women under 40

Newswise Jul 25, 2018

A new study from the Stanford Cancer Institute finds that young women who are treated with chemotherapy for breast cancer, but have residual tumor in either the breast or lymph nodes have higher chances of recurrence compared to those with no evidence of any residual invasive tumor (pathologic complete response). The findings were published in the July issue of Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network. The research was led by Margaret Kozak, MD, resident, and Kathleen C. Horst, MD, associate professor of radiation oncology, both at the Stanford University School of Medicine, and took a close look at the outcomes for women who were diagnosed with breast cancer under the age of 40.

“Young women with breast cancer tend to present with more advanced disease and with more aggressive breast cancer subtypes, such as triple negative, so it is important not to group them in with older women who are more likely to be diagnosed with slower-growing breast tumors,” explained Dr. Kozak. “This is a particularly high-risk group that is not studied on its own in prospective clinical trials, so few details exist on the optimal approach to treatment for this patient population."

The retrospective analysis was conducted on 155 women who were treated at Stanford between 1991 and 2015. Their median age was 36 years, with a median follow-up time of 52 months. Patients were excluded from the study if their records were not available, if they had metastatic disease at the time of diagnosis, or if they had received chemotherapy for other cancer diagnoses. The researchers found that patients who received neoadjuvant chemotherapy and were left with residual disease in either the breast or lymph nodes had a significantly higher incidence of local, regional, or distant failure, compared to patients who achieved pathologic complete response.

“This is important because an ongoing question right now is whether de-escalation of treatment in the form of omitting adjuvant radiation treatment is appropriate for patients who attain lymph node negative status after neoadjuvant chemotherapy,” said Dr. Horst. “Women under 40 with breast cancer should continue to be treated aggressively; de-escalation of treatment should only be considered for those with a complete response to chemotherapy or within the context of a clinical trial.”

“By assessing patient outcomes in a relatively large group of women under 40 treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy, this study adds significantly to the existing literature,” said Meena S. Moran, MD, professor and director of Yale Radiation Therapy Breast Program, Yale Cancer Center/Smilow Cancer Hospital, member, NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology (NCCN Guidelines®) Panel for Breast Cancer. “The findings highlight the aggressive nature of this disease in young patients when a complete pathologic response is not achieved in both lymph nodes and the breast. That was not apparent in the original randomized trials. These results suggest that young patients who don’t achieve a complete response are part of a high-risk group. At a minimum, these patients should adhere to standard post-mastectomy or whole breast radiation indications, as described by the NCCN Guidelines® for Breast Cancer—but, due to the high risk nature of their disease, they should also be considered for additional systemic options and enrollment in clinical trials.”

The researchers determined that mastectomy, adjuvant radiation therapy, and achievement of pathologic complete response were all good predictors for overall survival.

—Newswise

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