Dayton Daily News

Some with breast cancer can skip chemo

- By Laurie McGinley

The majority of CHICAGO — women with the most common type of early-stage breast cancer can safely skip chemothera­py after surgery, according to a highly anticipate­d new report. The results are sure to accelerate the decline in chemothera­py for the disease.

The findings, from the largest breast cancer treatment trial ever conducted, showed that most patients who have an intermedia­te risk of a cancer recurrence — a group that numbers 65,000 women a year in the United States — can avoid chemothera­py and its often debilitati­ng side effects.

“We have been waiting for these results for years,” said Allison Kurian, an oncologist at Stanford University who wasn’t

involved in the trial. “They are going to change treatment — and remove uncertaint­y for women making decisions.”

The same decade-long study had previously confirmed that patients at low risk, as determined by a genomic test of their tumors, can skip chemothera­py.

The two groups, taken together, account for about 70 percent of women diagnosed with the most common type of breast cancer. That means more than 85,000 women a year can safely forgo chemothera­py.

Some of those women have already been skipping chemothera­py based on less rigorous research. Now they can have confidence in those decisions, experts said. Other patients may change their treatment approach based on the results.

The cancer in question is driven by hormones, has not spread to the lymph nodes and doesn’t contain a protein called HER2. Generally, after surgery, such patients receive endocrine therapy, such as tamoxifen, which is designed to block the cancer-spurring effects of hormones.

Otis Brawley, chief medical and scientific officer of the American Cancer Society, called the trial a good example of “precision medicine” and said it would save many women from unneeded chemothera­py.

Sunday’s results came from a federally sponsored trial called TailorX, which was designed to help doctors more precisely tailor treatments for early-stage breast cancer. Since 2006, the trial has enrolled more than 10,000 women in the United States and five other countries diagnosed with early breast cancer and followed their progress through post-surgery treatment. The latest results were presented Sunday at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology and published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The patients’ tumors were analyzed using a test called Oncotype DX, which examines the activity of 21 genes to predict the risk of a recurrence over 10 years. Previous studies had made clear that women with low scores could skip chemothera­py and those with high scores should get it.

The big outstandin­g question was: What should women with “midrange” scores get? Such patients have been in “the gray zone, and we haven’t known what to tell them,” Kurian said.

To find the answer, researcher­s randomly assigned more than 6,700 women with intermedia­te scores — 11 to 25 — to two groups. After surgery, one group got endocrine therapy only, while the other was treated with endocrine therapy plus chemothera­py. After years of follow-up, the data showed that most patients who did not get chemothera­py fared as well as those who did.

Women aged 50 or younger were the notable exception. Those with recurrence scores of 16 and above got a “substantia­l” benefit from chemothera­py and should consider it, said lead author Joseph Sparano, associate director for clinical research at the Albert Einstein Cancer Center and Montefiore Medical Center.

Phyllis Laccetti, a 58-yearold night nurse at Montefiore, was diagnosed with cancer in her right breast in 2007. She had a lumpectomy, followed by a mastectomy, and had a recurrence score of 12 or 13, which put her in the middle range. She enrolled in the TailorX trial and was relieved to be randomly assigned to the group that did not get chemothera­py. She got only tamoxifen.

Because of her work as a nurse, she was familiar with chemothera­py’s sometimes harsh effects. She also watched her brother and sister — who died of thyroid cancer and leukemia, respective­ly — suffer through chemothera­py treatments.

“They were sick all the time,” she said. “My brother was so sick that he’d be saying, ‘I can’t do this anymore,’ and it was the same thing with my sister.”

Laccetti’s cancer has not returned.

The trial results are the latest piece of the puzzle on how to treat early-stage breast cancer. Most patients with the disease have a high survival rate, but their prognoses worsen drasticall­y if their cancer returns in other parts of the body. Because of that, many women with early-stage cancer used to be urged to get chemothera­py in hopes of preventing any spread. But in recent years, as many doctors concluded that women with early-stage cancer were being overtreate­d, they have reduced their use of chemothera­py, which can cause nausea, fatigue and, in rare cases, more serious complicati­ons such as leukemia and heart failure.

 ?? KATHY YOUNG / AP ?? Adine Usher, 78, meets with breast cancer study leader Dr. Joseph Sparano at the Montefiore and Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City.
KATHY YOUNG / AP Adine Usher, 78, meets with breast cancer study leader Dr. Joseph Sparano at the Montefiore and Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City.

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