Metastatic breast cancer treatment

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1], Assistant Editor-in-Chief Jack Khouri

Overview

With rare exception, metastatic breast cancer is an incurable but treatable illness. Currently, it is managed as a chronic disease, especially the category that is ER-positive with predominantly bone or soft tissue metastasis. Chemotherapy, biologic therapy and endocrine therapy are all considered in the treatment of metastatic breast cancer.

Principles of therapy

  • The main aims of therapy are prolonging survival, improving quality of life and avoiding treatment-induced toxicity. Given that treatment is palliative, patients should be given treatment holidays in order to reduce drug-induced toxicity.
  • HER2 overexpression and hormone receptor status are very important factors that guide therapy and influence prognosis.
  • Multiagent chemotherapy regimens don't show significant survival benefit compared to single-drug regimens and augment toxicity.
  • Chemotherapy is recommended for patients with ER-negative metastatic breast cancer and those with ER-positive breast cancer resistant to endocrine therapy or associated with visceral disease.
  • Trastuzumab increases the clinical benefit of first-line chemotherapy in metastatic breast cancer that overexpresses HER2.[1]
  • Single-agent trastuzumab is active and well tolerated as first-line treatment of women with metastatic breast cancer with HER2 3+ overexpression by IHC or gene amplification by FISH.[2]

Chemotherapy

  • Commonly used agents are Anthracyclines, Taxanes, Capecitabine, Gemcitabine, Eribulin, and Vinorelbine
  • Bevacizumab has been shown to improve the efficacy of taxanes in frontline treatment of patients with metastatic breast cancer.[3]

References

  1. Slamon DJ, Leyland-Jones B, Shak S, Fuchs H, Paton V, Bajamonde A et al. (2001) Use of chemotherapy plus a monoclonal antibody against HER2 for metastatic breast cancer that overexpresses HER2. N Engl J Med 344 (11):783-92. DOI:10.1056/NEJM200103153441101 PMID: 11248153
  2. Vogel CL, Cobleigh MA, Tripathy D, Gutheil JC, Harris LN, Fehrenbacher L et al. (2002) Efficacy and safety of trastuzumab as a single agent in first-line treatment of HER2-overexpressing metastatic breast cancer. J Clin Oncol 20 (3):719-26. PMID: 11821453
  3. Alvarez RH, Guarneri V, Icli F, Johnston S, Khayat D, Loibl S et al. (2011) Bevacizumab Treatment for Advanced Breast Cancer. Oncologist ():. DOI:10.1634/theoncologist.2011-0113 PMID: 21976315

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