Monday, July 23, 2018

No More Chemotherapy for Many Breast Cancer Patients

Breast Cancer Ribbon. No More Chemotherapy for Many Breast Cancer Patients
Terrific news! More and more women with early-stage breast cancer no longer need aggressive chemotherapy and can be spared the difficult side effects. Stamford Health’s Carl & Dorothy Bennett Cancer Center participated in the clinical trial TAILORx which was reported in the recent national meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology. This study showed that if a woman over age 50 with an estrogen-receptor-positive breast cancer (breast cancer with proteins in or on cells that attach to the hormone estrogen) displays an intermediate cancer recurrence score of 11-25 based on the genomic test OncotypeDx, then she will not benefit from chemotherapy. The only systemic therapy she needs is the much more easily tolerated endocrine, anti-estrogen therapy.
It is estimated that this study will spare 60,000 women per year from receiving chemotherapy. Although this study applied only to patients who do not have axillary (armpit) lymph node involvement (the presence of cancer cells in the surrounding lymph nodes), there are data that the OncotypeDx is applicable to women with lymph node positive disease in determining those who need chemotherapy and those who do not. Click here to continue reading.

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