Study Shows Greatest
Benefit of Chemotherapy in ER-Negative Tumors
Behind the Cancer Headlines®
Despite the common belief in the oncology community that cancer research and treatment have focused on breast tumors that are estrogen receptor (ER)-positive, a researcher from The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center maintains that clinicians have made "enormous strides" in treating patients with tumors that are ER-negative.
In a presentation at the annual meeting of the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium, Donald Berry, Ph.D., a professor and chair of the Department of Biostatistics and Applied Mathematics, looked at decades of breast cancer clinical trial experience and found that "the benefit of chemotherapy advances over the last 20 years to ER-negative patients has been surprisingly dramatic."
In examining the impact of chemotherapy treatment of
node-positive breast cancer in three national clinical trials, which enrolled
more than 6,000 patients cumulatively,
The studies, conducted by the Cancer and Leukemia Group B
(CALGB) and the U.S. Breast
Intergroup, all tested different chemotherapy
regimens and doses in women whose cancer had spread to their lymph nodes, and
all three showed statistically significant results. But, patients were treated
"irrespective of hormone sensitivities or whether they had received
tamoxifen
or not,"
The impact of such preventive treatments, however, was not
"weighted" in these trials, he says. "People accept and act as though
chemotherapy is equally beneficial independent of ER status," he says. In his
analysis,
He adds that the study proves that breast cancer patients of
both hormonal types are being aided by clinical advances. "The prevailing
wisdom has been that science has focused on ER-positive tumors, with
development of
SERMs
and now
aromatase
inhibitors, but ER-negative patients have been left in the lurch,"
SOURCES:
San Antonio Breast Cancer
Symposium ,