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Breast cancer Prof Arlene Chan Medical Oncologist Director Breast Clinical Trials Unit, Mount Hospital Vice-Chair Breast Cancer Research Centre - WA Breast cancer Incidence of Breast Cancer by Stage at Diagnosis (Europe 2005) Stage Number % of Total Stage I 70,270 38.1% Stage II 85,140 46.3% Stage III 17,130 9.3% Stage IV 11,530 6.3% Total 184,070 100% Metastatic breast cancer: improved survival over time 1.0 Cumulative survival 0.8 0.6 1995–2000 1990–1994 0.4 1985–1989 0.2 1980–1984 1974–1979 0.0 0 12 24 36 Months 48 60 How do we approach breast cancer management to improve outcome? Research Genetics SYSTEMIC treatment (Drugs) Diagnosis LOCO-REGIONAL treatment (Surgery & Radiation therapy Improve outcome in patients with breast cancer Risk factors ◊ Estrogen exposure: » Physiological, Exogenous ◊ Growth factors » Obesity, Alcohol ◊ Pre-cancerous breast conditions ◊ Chest irradiation – ‘huge’ doses ◊ Breast cancer-susceptible genes* Diagnosis ◊ EBC (stage 1-3) » Earlier diagnosis translates into higher chance of cure » Once diagnosed, plan best surgery ± reconstruction ± radiation therapy » Discuss relapse risk » Systemic treatment ◊ MBC (stage 4) ◊ Earlier diagnosis does not translate into higher rate of response or survival ◊ Tissue diagnosis*** for type of BrC ◊ Assess extent of BrC ◊ Assess fitness ◊ Give best therapy based on evidence-based research Systemic therapy: Principles • Breast cancer is a heterogeneous* disease -> Different sub-types which behave differently: • Different growth rates • Responds to treatment differently (drugs / radiation therapy) • Although may “prefer” certain sites in body, this does not have major effect on management * Dissimilar; possessing different or opposing characteristics in the same individual Basal-like HER-2 “Normal” Luminal B Luminal A Sørlie et al. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2001;98:10869-10874. • Metastatic disease is generally considered “incurable” but • Very treatable • Many options available – need to use in correct order • Choice depends on: • Sub-type of breast cancer • Where and how much metastatic cancer • Underlying fitness of patient • Any previous treatment given Growth factor Estrogen EGFR / Her2 Her3/Her2 IGFR EGFR / HER2 Plasma membran e P P P P P P P PI3-K Cell survival Akt P SOS RAS RAF P MEK P ER p90RSK Cytoplas m P Nucleus P P P ER ER ERE p160 CBP P MAPK Basal transcription machinery P Cell growth ER target gene transcription Adapted from Johnston S. Clin Cancer Res. 2005;11:889S-899S. Types of systemic therapy ◊ Endocrine therapy » Tamoxifen » Aromatase inhibitors: Letrozole, Anastrozole, Exemestane » Ovary suppression ◊ Chemotherapy ◊ Biologic therapy Biological drug Endocrine drug Chemotherapy drug Supportive tissues cells VEGF TGF EGFR ER HER2 GF-R VEGF-R Cell membrane Nuclear membrane Gene transcription Cell growth and proliferation Inhibition of apoptosis Increased cell mobility Tumor growth Resistance to chemotherapy Metastasis Inside cell Signaling cascade Breast cancer Research Principles Tumour behavior Concept Understand tumour biology Understand patient needs? Desig n Execution Scientific design: Patients in study must be “the same” Must show it’s not a chance finding Primary aim to be achieved Source funding Timely recruitment Many centres required Regulatory aspects Analyse data Collect all data (years) Publish Constant check of data U.S. FDA approval in MBC Trastuzumab 2000 Nab paclitaxel Docetaxel Capecitabine Methotrexate 1996 1998 Gemcitabine 2005 1971 2004 Lapatinib Doxorubicin Paclitaxel Cyclophosphamide 2007 1974 1994 1959 Bevacizumab 2008 1955 1965 1975 1985 1995 2005 2015 Conclusions ◊ Breast cancer has many facets Education of: » Risks – Detection – Differing behaviour » Local & Systemic treatment options » Early vs Metastatic disease •Patients •Community/Gov » Short & Long term consequences of treatment » Addressing non-medical needs ◊ Multidisciplinary approach ◊ Best outcome requires application of scientifically-proven treatments •GP •Allied health •Specialists