Title: When Breast Cancer Recurs
1When Breast Cancer Recurs
2Breast Cancer Recurrence
- Detection
- Tools
- Future directions
- Questions
3Recurrence vs Second Primary
4Detection
- Symptoms
- Tumor markers
- CA 27 -29
- CA 15 -3
- Other blood tests
- CTC (Circulating Tumor Cells)
- X-rays/CAT scan/Bone Scan
- PET scan
5Staging
- Local/regional
- Systemic
- Bone only
- Visceral organs
- Lung
- Liver
- Other sites
6Local/Regional Recurrence
- Breast (Same side)
- Skin (after mastectomy)
- Axilla (arm pit)
- Over collar bone
7Management of Local Recurrence
- Surgery
- Radiation
- Chemotherapy
- All of the above
8Management of Systemic Disease
9Regional Therapy
- Radio Frequency Ablation
- Cryotherapy
- Chemoembolization
- Surgery
- Radiation
10Surgery
- Palliative intent vs curative intent
- Solitary brain metastasis
- Skin recurrence
- Other selected situations
11Radiation Therapy
- External Beam
- Gamma Knife/Novalis/Cyberknife/Tomotherapy
- (for brain lesions)
12Systemic Treatments for Systemic Disease
13Hormone Therapy
14Normal Breast Cell
Estrogen Receptor
Estrogen
Resting Breast Cell
Activated Breast Cell
15Breast Cancer Evolution
Estrogen Receptor
Genetics
Breast Cancer Cell
Environment
Hormone Sensitive
Hormone Resistant
16Hormone therapy
- Turn off Estrogen (pre-menopausal)
- Removal of ovaries
- Turn off ovaries (Lupron, Zoladex)
- Block Estrogen Receptors
- Tamoxifen/Toremifine/Raloxifene and Faslodex
- Aromatase Inhibitors
- Arimidex/Femara/Aromasin
- Other options
- Megace, Aminoglutethamide?
17Chemotherapy for Breast Cancer
- Taxanes
- Taxol/Taxotere/Abraxane
- Major side effect is nerve injury
- Anthracyclines
- Adriamycin/Doxil/Epirubicin/Mitoxantrone
- Major side effect is weakening of heart
- Microtubule inhibitors
- Navelbine/Vincristine
- Major side effect is low blood counts
18Chemotherapy for Breast Cancer (cont.)
- Antimetabolites
- 5FU/Xeloda/Gemcitabine/Methotrexate
- Major side effects vary
- Ixempra (ixabepilone)
- Major side effect is fatigue
- Carboplatinum/Cytoxan/Cisplatinum
- Major side effect low blood counts
19Combinations of chemo drugs
- Alphabet soup
- AC FAC FEC AT TAC EC CMF GT TC
- What we know about combinations
- They are more toxic
- They may work faster
- They do not result in better long term control
- Combinations of chemo and Targeted Therapy is a
different story
20What are the Targets in Breast Cancer?
Her-2 (Herceptin)
PARP
Estrogen Receptor
EGFR/VEGF (Avastin)
21Some of the most aggressive breast cancers are
driven by a transmembrane receptor protein known
as HER2
Roughly 20,000 HER2 receptors are typically
expressed on the surface of healthy breast cells
22 In approximately 25 of primary breast cancers,
the HER2 protein is overexpressed, resulting in
tumor cells with as many as 2 million receptors
present
23Herceptin is a monoclonal antibody specifically
designed to target the HER2 receptor
24Based on pre-clinical studies, Herceptin delivers
continuous inhibition of HER2 activity by working
on both the extracellular and intracellular
domains of the receptor
25Extracellularly, Herceptin binds to tumor cells
and flags them for destruction by the immune
system
26Intracellularly, bound Herceptin prevents HER2
receptor activity by blocking HER2 signaling
27Based on pre-clinical studies, Herceptin enhanced
the effects of chemotherapy, leading to cell
stasis and death
28Herceptin therapy
- Her-2 neu oncogene abnormal in 20 of breast
cancers - 18-20 response rate when used alone in Her-2
positive tumors - When combined with chemo response rate 60-70
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31Phase III Study to Test if Total HER2 Blockade
Improves Clinical Outcome
RANDOMIZATION
- Key Inclusion
- HER2(FISH/ IHC3) MBC
- Progression on
- Anthracycline
- Taxane
- Trastuzumab
- Progression on most recent trastuzumab regimen
Lapatinib 1500 mg/day PO N148
Crossover if PD after 4wk therapy (N73)
Lapatinib 1000 mg/day PO Trastuzumab 4 2
mg/kg IV qw N148
- Stratification Factors
- Visceral Disease
- Hormone Receptor
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33Angiogenesis development of new blood vessels
34Bevacizumab (Avastin)
- an intravenous antibody
- binds to VEGF ? inhibits new blood vessel
formation - another target to interrupt tumor growth
- FDA approved for breast, lung, colorectal,
kidney, brain tumors
35Bevacizumab (Avastin) Summary
- Alone, response rate is low
- When combined with chemotherapy responses are
more frequent and delay progression of disease - In combination with Paclitaxel (Taxol)
progression delayed by four months, twice as many
responses - Similar results in 1st line setting with Taxotere
- Simlar results in 2nd line setting with a number
of drugs - no overall survival benefit to date
- consider disease burden, overall treatment
sequencing plan, cost, side effects
36Triple Negative Breast Cancer
- Estrogen Receptor Negative
- Progesterone Receptor Negative
- Her-2 negative
- No targets?
37PARP Inhibitor-Based Therapy for TNBC
- PARP1
- DNA repair Enzyme (helps cells overcome injury
from chemo) - Upregulated in majority of triple negative human
breast cancers1 - BSI-201
- Small molecule PARP inhibitor
- Potentiates effects of chemotherapy-induced DNA
damage - No dose-limiting toxicities in Phase I studies of
BSI-201 alone or in combination with
chemotherapy - Marked and prolonged PARP inhibition
38Phase II TNBC Study Treatment Schema
RANDOMIZE
Metastatic TNBC N 120
BSI-201 (5.6 mg/kg, IV, d 1, 4, 8,
11) Gemcitabine (1000 mg/m2, IV, d 1,
8) Carboplatin (AUC 2, IV, d 1, 8)
Gemcitabine (1000 mg/m2, IV, d 1, 8) Carboplatin
(AUC 2, IV, d 1, 8)
21-Day Cycle
RESTAGING Every 2 Cycles
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39Progression-Free Survival
BSI-201 Gem/Carbo (n 57) Median PFS 6.9
months Gem/Carbo (n 59) Median PFS 3.3
months P lt 0.0001 HR 0.342 (95 CI,
0.200-0.584)
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40Overall Survival
BSI-201 Gem/Carbo (n 57) Median OS 9.2
months 8 Gem/Carbo (n 59) Median OS 5.7
months P 0.0005 HR 0.348 (95 CI,
0.189-0.649)
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41Supportive therapy
- Bisphosphonates to protect bones
- Aredia (Pamidronate)
- Zoledronate (Zometa)
- Clodronate
- Growth Factors to repair blood cell injury from
chemo - Procrit/Aranesp (red blood cells)
- Neupogen/Neulasta (white blood cells)
42Alternative/Complementary Therapy
- Herbal
- Vitamin
- Diet
- Accupunture
- Immune stimulants
- Prayer
43Making the Best Choice
- No single drug treatment rises above all others
- Some drugs or combinations will work better in
one patient and not in another - New tools becoming available to predict how an
individual cancer will respond - DNA fingerprint-Oncotype Dx
- Research trial? When is the best time?
44Choosing Therapies
- Age of patient
- Social situation
- Location and behavior of disease
- Extent of disease
- Symptoms of disease
- Targets on this particular cancer
- Philosophy of patient
- Philosophy of physician
45Differing Philosophies
46Aggressive approach
- Combinations better than single agents
- Dose intensity (more milligrams per month)
matters - Short term toxicity in return for long term
control - More important with aggressive or imminently life
threatening disease
47Balancing act
- Single agents as good as combinations
- Balance control of cancer with nurture of normal
tissues - Recurrent breast cancer a chronic disease?
48Survival
- Depends on a number of variables
- Extent of disease/location of disease
- Behavior of disease (growing fast or slow)
- Susceptibility of the cancer to our therapy
- Overall health of the patient (can she take the
treatments that are available) - Luck
- Spirit of the patient
- Support available for the patient
49When is Chemo no longer useful?
- As women progress through treatments, cancer
becomes more resistant to treatment and the body
becomes more fragile - At some point, even mild forms of chemo may do
more harm than good (getting out of balance) - There is no bright line to determine when it is
better to focus on purely comfort oriented care - Need to balance desire to remain hopeful with
need to think and plan for the time when chemo no
longer makes sense
50Resources
- WWW.breastcancer.org
- WWW.komen.org
- WWW.cancerconsultants.com
- WWW.peoplelivingwithcancer.org
- WWW.NCCN.ORG
51Questions