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result(s) for
"Breast Neoplasms - secondary"
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Trastuzumab Deruxtecan in Previously Treated HER2-Low Advanced Breast Cancer
by
Wang, Xiaojia
,
Lee, Keun Seok
,
Moore, Halle C.F.
in
Antibodies
,
Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized - adverse effects
,
Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized - therapeutic use
2022
More than half of breast cancers express low levels of HER2. In a phase 3 trial, the antibody–drug conjugate trastuzumab deruxtecan resulted in longer survival than the physician’s choice of chemotherapy among patients with HER2-low breast cancer.
Journal Article
Non-mammary metastases to the breast and axilla: a study of 85 cases
by
Brogi, Edi
,
Corben, Adriana D
,
Catalano, Jeffrey P
in
692/699/67/322
,
692/700/139/422
,
Adolescent
2013
Non-mammary metastases to the breast and axilla are rare occurrences. However, they are important diagnostic considerations as their treatment and prognosis differ significantly from primary breast cancer. Between 1990 and 2010, we identified a total of 85 patients, 72 women and 13 men, with non-mammary malignancies involving the breast, axilla, or both. The tumor types consisted of carcinoma (58%), melanoma (22%) and sarcoma (20%). Ovary was the most common site of origin for carcinoma, and metastatic high-grade ovarian serous carcinoma was most frequently misdiagnosed as a primary breast carcinoma. Melanoma was the single most common non-carcinomatous tumor type to involve the breast and/or axilla, and uterine leiomyosarcoma was the most common type of sarcoma. Most patients (77%) had other metastases at the time of diagnosis of the tumor, but in 11% the breast or axillary lesion was the first presentation. Without a clinical history, non-mammary metastases were difficult to diagnose because the majority of cases presented with a solitary nodule and lacked pathognomonic pathologic features. There were, however, certain recurrent histological findings identified, such as the often relatively well-circumscribed growth pattern of the metastatic lesion surrounded by a fibrous pseudocapsule, and the absence of an in situ carcinoma. Overall, these patients had poor survival; 96% of patients with follow-up available are dead of disease, with a median survival of 15 months after the diagnosis of the breast or axillary lesion. This finding emphasizes the need to accurately identify these tumors as metastases in order to avoid unnecessary procedures and treatments in these patients.
Journal Article
Scalable whole-exome sequencing of cell-free DNA reveals high concordance with metastatic tumors
by
Freeman, Samuel S.
,
Lin, Nancy U.
,
Rosenberg, Mara
in
631/67/69
,
692/4028/67
,
Antigens, Neoplasm - genetics
2017
Whole-exome sequencing of cell-free DNA (cfDNA) could enable comprehensive profiling of tumors from blood but the genome-wide concordance between cfDNA and tumor biopsies is uncertain. Here we report ichorCNA, software that quantifies tumor content in cfDNA from 0.1× coverage whole-genome sequencing data without prior knowledge of tumor mutations. We apply ichorCNA to 1439 blood samples from 520 patients with metastatic prostate or breast cancers. In the earliest tested sample for each patient, 34% of patients have ≥10% tumor-derived cfDNA, sufficient for standard coverage whole-exome sequencing. Using whole-exome sequencing, we validate the concordance of clonal somatic mutations (88%), copy number alterations (80%), mutational signatures, and neoantigens between cfDNA and matched tumor biopsies from 41 patients with ≥10% cfDNA tumor content. In summary, we provide methods to identify patients eligible for comprehensive cfDNA profiling, revealing its applicability to many patients, and demonstrate high concordance of cfDNA and metastatic tumor whole-exome sequencing.
Identifying the mutational landscape of tumours from cell-free DNA in the blood could help diagnostics in cancer. Here, the authors present ichorCNA, software that quantifies tumour content in cell free DNA, and they demonstrate that cell-free DNA whole-exome sequencing is concordant with metastatic tumour whole-exome sequencing.
Journal Article
Primary and secondary angiosarcomas of the breast: a single institution experience
by
Luini, Alberto
,
Gobbi, Helenice
,
Mastropasqua, Mauro Giuseppe
in
Adult
,
Aged
,
Biological and medical sciences
2012
Angiosarcomas of the breast (ASB) are rare, representing <1% of breast malignancies. They can develop as a primary or secondary malignancy, also called post-radiation angiosarcoma. The aim of the this study is to discuss diagnosis, treatment, and outcome of primary and secondary ASB patients, diagnosed and treated in a single institution, over a 10-year period and to further compare the two conditions. We retrieved 28 consecutive cases of ASB, diagnosed from 1999 to 2009 at the European Institute of Oncology. Clinical and pathologic findings and survival analyses were performed. Of the 28 cases (27 women and 1 man), eight were primary breast angiosarcomas (PBA) and 20 were secondary breast angiosarcomas (SBA). Median follow-up was 23 months (range 1–112 months). Type of treatment (conservative or radical surgery) did not affect survival in both types of angiosarcomas
.
The clinical course observed was characterized by a high rate of local recurrence rather than distant metastasis or death from disease. There was a correlation between histological grade and prognosis of angiosarcomas with high-grade tumors presenting worse prognosis. SBA had a poorer prognosis compared to PBA. Our data indicate that primary and secondary ASB are distinct clinical and pathological features. SBA showed worse prognosis and was more often diagnosed in the study period compared to PBA. Physicians who care for patients who have been treated with radiation must be aware of its potential to induce angiosarcoma and stay vigilant in its detection.
Journal Article
Breast Metastases from Extramammary Malignancies: Typical and Atypical Ultrasound Features
by
Shin, Jung Hee
,
Ko, Eun Young
,
Han, Boo-Kyung
in
Adenocarcinoma - diagnostic imaging
,
Adenocarcinoma - secondary
,
Adolescent
2014
Breast metastases from extramammary malignancies are uncommon. The most common sources are lymphomas/leukemias and melanomas. Some of the less common sources include carcinomas of the lung, ovary, and stomach, and infrequently, carcinoid tumors, hypernephromas, carcinomas of the liver, tonsil, pleura, pancreas, cervix, perineum, endometrium and bladder. Breast metastases from extramammary malignancies have both hematogenous and lymphatic routes. According to their routes, there are common radiological features of metastatic diseases of the breast, but the features are not specific for metastases. Typical ultrasound (US) features of hematogenous metastases include single or multiple, round to oval shaped, well-circumscribed hypoechoic masses without spiculations, calcifications, or architectural distortion; these masses are commonly located superficially in subcutaneous tissue or immediately adjacent to the breast parenchyma that is relatively rich in blood supply. Typical US features of lymphatic breast metastases include diffusely and heterogeneously increased echogenicities in subcutaneous fat and glandular tissue and a thick trabecular pattern with secondary skin thickening, lymphedema, and lymph node enlargement. However, lesions show variable US features in some cases, and differentiation of these lesions from primary breast cancer or from benign lesions is difficult. In this review, we demonstrate various US appearances of breast metastases from extramammary malignancies as typical and atypical features, based on the results of US and other imaging studies performed at our institution. Awareness of the typical and atypical imaging features of these lesions may be helpful to diagnose metastatic lesions of the breast.
Journal Article
Final results of a phase II study of nab-paclitaxel, bevacizumab, and gemcitabine as first-line therapy for patients with HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer
by
Castrellon, Aurelio
,
Seo, Pearl
,
Baez, Odalys
in
Adult
,
Aged
,
Albumins - administration & dosage
2010
In order to examine the efficacy and safety of nanoparticle albumin-bound paclitaxel (nab-P) in combination with bevacizumab (B) and gemcitabine (G) for the first-line treatment of patients with HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer (MBC). In this single-center, open-label phase II trial, patients with HER2-negative MBC received gemcitabine 1500 mg/m², nab-paclitaxel 150 mg/m², and bevacizumab 10 mg/kg (each administered intravenously) on days 1 and 15 of a 28-day cycle. The primary end point was progression free survival (PFS); secondary end points were overall response rate (ORR), complete (CR) and partial (PR) response rates, clinical benefit (ORR + stable disease), overall survival (OS), and safety. Thirty patients were enrolled. One patient was ineligible and was not included in analysis. Median PFS was 10.4 months (95% CI: 5.6-15.2 months). ORR was 75.9%, comprising eight (27.6%) CRs and 14 (48.3%) PRs; five patients had stable disease (SD) and two patients (6.9%) had progressive disease (PD) as their best response. The clinical benefit rate was 93.1% (27/29) in the overall group and 84.6% in the triple-negative cohort (11/13). The 18-month survival rate was 77.2% (95% CI: 51.1-90.5%). Eight (27.6%) patients experienced grade 3 or 4 toxicity: grade 4 neutropenic fever (n = 1) and grade 3 infection (n = 6), leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, peripheral neuropathy, seizure, shortness of breath, hematuria, and cardiac tamponade (one each). First-line therapy with nab-P, B, and G demonstrated a median PFS of 10.4 months and a 75.9% ORR with acceptable toxicity; this novel combination warrants investigation in a randomized study.
Journal Article
Chromosomal instability drives metastasis through a cytosolic DNA response
2018
Chromosomal instability is a hallmark of cancer that results from ongoing errors in chromosome segregation during mitosis. Although chromosomal instability is a major driver of tumour evolution, its role in metastasis has not been established. Here we show that chromosomal instability promotes metastasis by sustaining a tumour cell-autonomous response to cytosolic DNA. Errors in chromosome segregation create a preponderance of micronuclei whose rupture spills genomic DNA into the cytosol. This leads to the activation of the cGAS–STING (cyclic GMP-AMP synthase–stimulator of interferon genes) cytosolic DNA-sensing pathway and downstream noncanonical NF-κB signalling. Genetic suppression of chromosomal instability markedly delays metastasis even in highly aneuploid tumour models, whereas continuous chromosome segregation errors promote cellular invasion and metastasis in a STING-dependent manner. By subverting lethal epithelial responses to cytosolic DNA, chromosomally unstable tumour cells co-opt chronic activation of innate immune pathways to spread to distant organs.
In chromosomally unstable tumour cells, rupture of micronuclei exposes genomic DNA and activates the cGAS–STING cytosolic DNA-sensing pathway, thereby promoting metastasis.
Chromosomal instability promotes metastasis
The cGAS–STING cytosolic DNA-sensing pathway detects the presence of double-stranded DNA in the cytosol of cells, which triggers an inflammatory response. This pathway can be activated by foreign or cellular DNA. Lewis Cantley and colleagues show that the pathway is activated in human cancer cells with chromosomal instability. Improper segregation of chromosomes during cell division leads to the formation of unstable micronuclei, which burst and release their DNA into the cytosol. The resulting inflammatory response involves activation of NF-κB signalling and promotes metastasis in a STING-dependent manner. These findings link chromosomal instability to metastasis and may offer new avenues to preventing the spread of cancer to distant organs.
Journal Article
The mode of progressive disease affects the prognosis of patients with metastatic breast cancer
by
Mori, Ryutaro
,
Futamura, Manabu
,
Tokumaru, Yoshihisa
in
Antineoplastic Agents - therapeutic use
,
Bevacizumab
,
Breast cancer
2018
Background
According to the Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST), progressive disease (PD) is diagnosed under two conditions: an increase in size of pre-existing lesions (IS) and the appearance of new lesions (NL). We retrospectively investigated the difference in the prognosis between IS and NL.
Methods
Patients receiving drug therapies for metastatic breast cancer between 2004 and 2015 at our institution were reviewed. The survival time after NL and IS was compared and the frequency of NL with each drug calculated.
Results
For the 107 eligible patients, the survival time after NL at second-line chemotherapy was significantly worse than after IS (median survival time 4.3 months vs. 20.3 months,
p
= 0.0048). Maintenance therapy with bevacizumab or trastuzumab had a high frequency of NL (88.9%), and third-line eribulin had a low frequency of NL (16.7%). A multivariate analysis showed that NL at second-line chemotherapy was not an independent risk factor (hazard ratio 1.02, 95%; confidence interval 0.54–1.93,
p
= 0.95) for the total survival time.
Conclusions
Patients with IS had a better survival after PD than those with NL. We may be able to avoid changing drug therapy for patients without NL and allow them to continue drug therapy for longer.
Journal Article
Pembrolizumab plus chemotherapy versus placebo plus chemotherapy for previously untreated locally recurrent inoperable or metastatic triple-negative breast cancer (KEYNOTE-355): a randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blind, phase 3 clinical trial
by
Felipe, Silva
,
Lipatov, Oleg
,
Mei-Ching, Liu
in
Adult
,
Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized - therapeutic use
,
Anticancer properties
2020
Pembrolizumab monotherapy showed durable antitumour activity and manageable safety in patients with metastatic triple-negative breast cancer. We aimed to examine whether the addition of pembrolizumab would enhance the antitumour activity of chemotherapy in patients with metastatic triple-negative breast cancer.
In this randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blind, phase 3 trial, done in 209 sites in 29 countries, we randomly assigned patients 2:1 with untreated locally recurrent inoperable or metastatic triple-negative breast cancer using a block method (block size of six) and an interactive voice-response system with integrated web-response to pembrolizumab (200 mg) every 3 weeks plus chemotherapy (nab-paclitaxel; paclitaxel; or gemcitabine plus carboplatin) or placebo plus chemotherapy. Randomisation was stratified by type of on-study chemotherapy (taxane or gemcitabine–carboplatin), PD-L1 expression at baseline (combined positive score [CPS] ≥1 or <1), and previous treatment with the same class of chemotherapy in the neoadjuvant or adjuvant setting (yes or no). Eligibility criteria included age at least 18 years, centrally confirmed triple-negative breast cancer; at least one measurable lesion; provision of a newly obtained tumour sample for determination of triple-negative breast cancer status and PD-L1 status by immunohistochemistry at a central laboratory; an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status score 0 or 1; and adequate organ function. The sponsor, investigators, other study site staff (except for the unmasked pharmacist), and patients were masked to pembrolizumab versus saline placebo administration. In addition, the sponsor, the investigators, other study site staff, and patients were masked to patient-level tumour PD-L1 biomarker results. Dual primary efficacy endpoints were progression-free survival and overall survival assessed in the PD-L1 CPS of 10 or more, CPS of 1 or more, and intention-to-treat populations. The definitive assessment of progression-free survival was done at this interim analysis; follow-up to assess overall survival is continuing. For progression-free survival, a hierarchical testing strategy was used, such that testing was done first in patients with CPS of 10 or more (prespecified statistical criterion was α=0·00411 at this interim analysis), then in patients with CPS of 1 or more (α=0·00111 at this interim analysis, with partial alpha from progression-free survival in patients with CPS of 10 or more passed over), and finally in the intention-to-treat population (α=0·00111 at this interim analysis). This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02819518, and is ongoing.
Between Jan 9, 2017, and June 12, 2018, of 1372 patients screened, 847 were randomly assigned to treatment, with 566 patients in the pembrolizumab–chemotherapy group and 281 patients in the placebo–chemotherapy group. At the second interim analysis (data cutoff, Dec 11, 2019), median follow-up was 25·9 months (IQR 22·8–29·9) in the pembrolizumab–chemotherapy group and 26·3 months (22·7–29·7) in the placebo–chemotherapy group. Among patients with CPS of 10 or more, median progression-free survival was 9·7 months with pembrolizumab–chemotherapy and 5·6 months with placebo–chemotherapy (hazard ratio [HR] for progression or death, 0·65, 95% CI 0·49–0·86; one-sided p=0·0012 [primary objective met]). Median progression-free survival was 7·6 and 5·6 months (HR, 0·74, 0·61–0·90; one-sided p=0·0014 [not significant]) among patients with CPS of 1 or more and 7·5 and 5·6 months (HR, 0·82, 0·69–0·97 [not tested]) among the intention-to-treat population. The pembrolizumab treatment effect increased with PD-L1 enrichment. Grade 3–5 treatment-related adverse event rates were 68% in the pembrolizumab–chemotherapy group and 67% in the placebo–chemotherapy group, including death in <1% in the pembrolizumab–chemotherapy group and 0% in the placebo–chemotherapy group.
Pembrolizumab–chemotherapy showed a significant and clinically meaningful improvement in progression-free survival versus placebo–chemotherapy among patients with metastatic triple-negative breast cancer with CPS of 10 or more. These findings suggest a role for the addition of pembrolizumab to standard chemotherapy for the first-line treatment of metastatic triple-negative breast cancer.
Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp, a subsidiary of Merck & Co, Inc.
Journal Article
Omitting Axillary Dissection in Breast Cancer with Sentinel-Node Metastases
2024
Patients with sentinel-node metastasis at the time of breast-cancer surgery may undergo axillary dissection to remove more nodes, which can lead to side effects. In a trial, the additional surgery did not prolong survival.
Journal Article