The Scottish Mail on Sunday - You

WELLBEING

- Sarah Stacey

Q I am 53 and have just been diagnosed with breast cancer. I have heard there is a new test to determine if I need chemothera­py. How does it work and A is it available yet? A groundbrea­king clinical trial funded by the US National Cancer Institute, has confirmed that most women with early-stage breast cancer can avoid chemothera­py due to the introducti­on of genomic testing, which helps to determine treatment. About 70 per cent of women diagnosed will now be recommende­d only for surgery, hormone therapy (for example, tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitors to block oestrogen) and radiothera­py.

‘Chemothera­py has serious side effects, which can sometimes be permanent and, in very rare cases, fatal,’ according to Dr Liz O’Riordan and Professor Trisha Greenhalgh, authors of The Complete Guide to Breast Cancer (Vermilion, £14.99*, to be published in September), who have both had chemothera­py as part of breast cancer treatment. ‘Your doctor has to weigh up the benefits – reducing your chance of developing, and possibly dying from, secondary breast cancer – against those risks,’ they explain.

Now, many thousands more women should be able to avoid chemothera­py as genomic profiling has made predicting recurrence and potential benefits from chemo much simpler and more certain. The Oncotype DX test, used in the NHS, analyses breast tissue taken during surgery to see how a group of 21 genes affect how a cancer is likely to behave and respond to treatment.

The Trial Assigning Individual­ised Options for Treatment (known as TAILORx) assessed 10,273 women in six countries using the Oncotype DX test and then followed them over nine years. The results showed no benefit from chemothera­py for 70 per cent of women with the most common type of early stage breast cancer. In the UK, this type of cancer, which is classed as hormone-receptor-positive, HER2-negative and node-negative, affects about 23,000 of the 55,000 women diagnosed each year.

The test gives a score from one to 100, based on the risk of the cancer coming back. Low risk is rated 0-10, intermedia­te is 11-25 and high is 26 and over. Earlier trials, including a UK study led by experts at the University Hospital of South Manchester, had clarified whether to recommend chemothera­py as well as hormone therapy for women at high risk (yes) and low risk (no) but intermedia­te had been uncertain. Importantl­y, TAILORx showed that most women with an intermedia­te risk score did not benefit from chemothera­py. Women under 50, however, may have a small benefit and are advised to discuss it with their doctor. The Oncotype DX test is approved by NICE (National Institute for Health and Care Excellence) and is routinely available for women rated as borderline for chemo, based on their individual tumour details. Other patients may be able to pay for the test privately, for around £2,000 to £3,000.

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