Breast cancer research and treatment
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Breast Cancer Res. Treat. · Jul 2010
Comparative StudySentinel lymph node identification with radiopharmaceuticals in patients with breast cancer: a comparison of 99mTc-tin colloid and 99mTc-phytate efficiency.
Sentinel lymph node biopsy with lymphoscintigraphy has become the standard method for the detection of axillary lymph node metastasis in breast cancer patients. However, there is no standardized radiopharmaceutical. For the detection of axillary lymph node metastasis by lymphoscintigraphy and sentinel node biopsy in patients with breast cancer, we compared the results between subareolar injection of (99m)Tc-tin colloid and injection of (99m)Tc-phytate. ⋯ Among 412 patients with (99m)Tc-tin colloid, the sentinel node was identified by lymphoscintigraphy in 364 cases (88.3%) and by a gamma probe in 369 cases (89.6%). Among 104 patients with (99m)Tc-phytate, 101 cases (97.1%) were identified by lymphoscintigraphy and 101 cases (97.1%) were identified by a gamma probe. The identification rates by lymphoscintigraphy and gamma probe were superior with (99m)Tc-phytate, as compared with (99m)Tc-tin colloid, with a statistically significant difference (P < 0.05 for both methods). (99m)Tc-phytate is a better choice than (99m)Tc-tin colloid for identification of the sentinel node in breast cancer patients.
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Breast Cancer Res. Treat. · Jun 2010
ReviewEfficacy of ixabepilone in ER/PR/HER2-negative (triple-negative) breast cancer.
Patients with ER/PR/HER2-negative (triple negative) breast cancer are not candidates for hormonal therapy or HER2-targeted agents. Ongoing research is aimed at identifying and understanding the benefit of established and emerging therapies in this disease setting. Triple-negative patients may achieve early responses to anthracyclines and taxanes, but novel strategies are also eagerly sought. ⋯ No increase in toxicity was noted in the triple-negative subgroup compared with other patients. Ixabepilone shows notable antitumor activity in patients with triple-negative breast cancer when used in a variety of settings. The addition of ixabepilone to capecitabine results in an approximately twofold increase in median PFS for triple-negative patients versus capecitabine alone and responses to ixabepilone in triple-negative disease are comparable to those seen in patients with non-triple-negative tumors.
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Breast Cancer Res. Treat. · Jun 2010
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter StudyPhase III randomized adjuvant study of tamoxifen alone versus sequential tamoxifen and anastrozole in Japanese postmenopausal women with hormone-responsive breast cancer: N-SAS BC03 study.
Clinical trials conducted in Western countries have shown that aromatase inhibitors are associated with better disease-free survival (DFS) than tamoxifen in postmenopausal early breast cancer. Because pharmacogenetic differences in drug-metabolizing genes may cause ethnic differences, assessment of the efficacy and tolerability of aromatase inhibitors in non-white women is warranted. This open-label, randomized clinical trial included 706 postmenopausal Japanese women with hormone-receptor-positive breast cancer, who had received tamoxifen for 1 to 4 years as adjuvant therapy. ⋯ The incidence of thromboembolic events in the tamoxifen group and bone fractures in the anastrozole group was not excessively high. Switching from tamoxifen to anastrozole was likely to decrease disease recurrence in postmenopausal Japanese breast cancer patients. Ethnic differences in major adverse events may be attributable to a low baseline risk of these events in Japanese.
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Breast Cancer Res. Treat. · Jun 2010
Multicenter Study Clinical TrialImmediate post-mastectomy breast reconstruction followed by radiotherapy: risk factors for complications.
The objective is to prospectively determine the factors responsible for reconstruction failure and capsular contracture in mastectomized breast cancer patients who underwent immediate two-stage breast reconstruction with a tissue expander and implant, followed by radiotherapy. This is a multicenter, prospective, non-randomized study. Between February 1998 and September 2006, we prospectively examined 141 consecutive patients, each of which received an implant after mastectomy, followed by chest wall radiotherapy at 46-50 Gy in 23-25 fractions. ⋯ The model accurately predicts 80% of failures. Mastectomy, immediate reconstruction (expander followed by implant), and radiotherapy should be considered when conservative surgery is contraindicated. Three factors may be used to select patients likely to benefit from this technique with a low failure rate.