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"I promise, Suzy... Even if it takes the rest of my life." -Nancy G. Brinker, Founder of Susan G. Komen for the Cure

What is TNBC

WHAT IS TRIPLE NEGATIVE BREAST CANCER?

Just in recent years, Triple Negative Breast Cancer (TNBC) has sparked interest in the news where instead of calling the tumor as ER-negative, PR-negative, and HER2-negative; researchers began using the shorthand term, "Triple Negative," dubbed the "new type" of breast cancer. Being Triple Negative, you don't have a targeted therapy and your only treatment option is chemotherapy.

Triple Negative Breast Cancer is seen in about 15% of all breast cancers. TNBC is a very aggressive cancer that tends to strike younger women, pre-menopause, especially among African-American women and women who have BRCA1 mutations. The tumor tends to be fast growing and is less likely to show up on an annual mammogram. TNBC is more likely to metastasis early on; has a high rate of recurrence in the first 2-3 years from diagnosis and has a poorer prognosis than other types of breast cancer due to lack of specific, targeted treatment for TNBC.

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Answering Your Questions About Triple-Negative Breast Cancer

by Bhuvaneswari Ramaswamy MD, MRCP
Assistant Professor of Internal Medicine
Division of Medical Oncology
Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and
Richard J. Solove Research Institute
The Ohio State University
What are the defining characteristics of triple-negative breast cancer?
Triple-negative breast cancers account for about 15 percent of all breast cancers and are defined as breast cancers that are estrogen receptor– and progesterone receptor–negative, meaning that these cancers do not depend on estrogen for their growth. In addition, the HER2/neu gene is not amplified in these cancers (when amplified, HER2/neu produces a protein called HER2 that acts as an accelerator for growth when present in an abundance in cancer cells).

What are the risk factors for triple-negative breast cancer?
There are no modifiable risk factors for triple-negative breast cancer. These cancers tend to occur more frequently in young premenopausal women, in African-American women, and in women who carry the abnormal inherited breast cancer susceptibility gene BRCA1.

Why is triple-negative breast cancer such a challenge to treat?
In general, these tumors are more aggressive and grow at a rapid rate. There are two major challenges in treating these tumors. First, because they have no known targets (such as estrogen receptor or HER2/neu), currently the only way to treat them is to use chemotherapy, which generally results in more side effects. Second, even when we treat these tumors with chemotherapy, they may or may not respond; and even when they do, response this is often short-lived.

Are there specific questions that women should ask their healthcare team when they are diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer?
The key question a woman who is diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer should ask is whether an appropriate clinical trial exists for her diagnosis. There are some novel approaches to treating these cancers that are still in investigational stages but which hold great promise. It is important that patients make use of these opportunities when possible to increase their treatment options. In addition, patients should be sure to consult their healthcare team to see if genetic testing should be a consideration.

What has been the standard protocol for treating triple-negative breast cancer, and what treatments or innovations are on the horizon for this difficult-to-treat disease?
The standard protocol to treat early-stage triple-negative breast cancer confined to the breast and the axillary lymph nodes is chemotherapy and surgery. Often chemotherapy is administered before the surgery. At present there are no further treatment options for early-stage triple-negative breast cancer beyond close follow-up care with regular physical exams and mammograms.
There are innovative approaches currently under study, however, including the addition of targeted therapy to this chemotherapy backbone. The Ohio State University is currently conducting a study that will include a gamma secretase inhibitor along with chemotherapy to target the more resistant cells. Additional studies at other institutions are investigating agents like Avastin® (bevacizumab, a monoclonal antibody) and the impact of prescribing various therapies following chemotherapy and surgery to prevent a recurrence, particularly for tumors that did not respond to primary chemotherapy.
For advanced triple-negative breast cancer, the current standard approach is to treat with various chemotherapy regimens. The most recent breakthrough in the treatment of such tumors is the success story of PARP inhibitors. Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) is an enzyme that is required for cells to repair the DNA damage induced by any form of injury (including radiation, UV rays, and chemotherapy). Unfortunately, the cancer cells also use this enzyme to correct the damage induced by chemotherapy, making that treatment less effective. Now researchers have shown that by including with chemotherapy a drug that inhibits the PARP enzyme, they can cause more damage to triple-negative breast cancers than when chemotherapy is delivered alone.
Several clinical trials are currently ongoing at various centers, using different PARP inhibitors with different chemotherapy in triple-negative and genetically inherited breast cancers. At The Ohio State University, we have a clinical trial in which a PARP inhibitor is used along with Paraplatin® (carboplatin) chemotherapy in women with advanced breast cancers.  _

 For more information about triple-negative breast cancer clinical trials at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center–James Cancer Hospital and Solove Research Institute, contact the Jamesline at (800) 293-5066.

http://awomanshealth.com/answering-your-questions-about-triple-negative-breast-cancer/ 

(Posted January 21, 2013)

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