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What does the future hold for treating patients with locally advanced breast cancer?

Date:
February 25, 2015
Source:
European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer
Summary:
Treating patients with locally advanced inoperable breast cancer is an extremely difficult task. The overwhelming majority of patients treated for this disease suffer relapse and, despite the best multimodal treatment, do not survive. There is a medical need to examine current and potential treatments, researchers say in a new article.
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FULL STORY

Treating patients with locally advanced inoperable breast cancer is an extremely difficult task. The overwhelming majority of patients treated for this disease suffer relapse and, despite the best multimodal treatment, do not survive. There is a medical need to examine current and potential treatments, and EORTC researchers have recently published an article in Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology concerning this topic.

Dr. Konstantinos Tryfonidis, EORTC Clinical Research Physician and lead author of this review says, "Locally advanced breast cancer is a term that includes a wide variety of breast tumors ranging from large operable cancers with extensive nodal involvement to inflammatory breast carcinomas. Indeed, some large operable breast tumors could fit in these categories, but we decided to limit our discussion to inoperable cancers. So, we are addressing, specifically, inoperable cases due to extensive skin involvement, fixed or very bulky axillary nodal disease and/or supraclavicular or internal mammary nodal involvement or tumors with inflammatory elements."

Dr. Fatima Cardoso of the Champalimaud Clinical Centre in Lisbon, Portugal, and corresponding author of this review points out, "The prognosis for patients with these tumors is often unfavorable, but advances in therapy offer some hope. Although not very often in developed countries, locally advanced inoperable breast cancer is still a challenging clinical problem in developing countries, particularly those without screening nor education/awareness programs. Managing the treatment of patients with this disease requires a multidisciplinary approach, and such an approach mandates a coordinated treatment schedule and close cooperation between medical, surgical and radiation oncologists. More and more, locally advanced inoperable breast cancer is drawing the interest of the oncology community, and as it was one of the main topics discussed at the Advanced Breast Cancer Symposium and Consensus Meeting 2 (ABC2) in Lisbon in November 2013."

Tryfonidis et al. discuss perspectives and future directions for the management of locally advanced breast cancer in Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology, and they see a need for not only standardizing treatment for this disease, but also for developing new therapies that could substantially improve outcome. They hope that these achievements might also serve as a model for improving the management of other disease stages and settings.


Story Source:

Materials provided by European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer. Original written by John Bean, PhD. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Konstantinos Tryfonidis, Elzbieta Senkus, Maria J. Cardoso, Fatima Cardoso. Management of locally advanced breast cancer—perspectives and future directions. Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology, 2015; DOI: 10.1038/nrclinonc.2015.13

Cite This Page:

European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer. "What does the future hold for treating patients with locally advanced breast cancer?." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 25 February 2015. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/02/150225103023.htm>.
European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer. (2015, February 25). What does the future hold for treating patients with locally advanced breast cancer?. ScienceDaily. Retrieved April 24, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/02/150225103023.htm
European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer. "What does the future hold for treating patients with locally advanced breast cancer?." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/02/150225103023.htm (accessed April 24, 2024).

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