Recurrent breast cancer: treatment strategies for maintaining and prolonging good quality of life
- PMID: 20204119
- PMCID: PMC2832109
- DOI: 10.3238/arztebl.2010.0085
Recurrent breast cancer: treatment strategies for maintaining and prolonging good quality of life
Abstract
Background: Recurrent breast cancer remains a challenge for interdisciplinary treatment even though new therapeutic options are available.
Methods: The PubMed database was selectively searched for articles that appeared from 1999 to 2009 and contained the key words "breast cancer," "recurrence," "metastatic," "advanced," and "treatment". Further sources consulted for this review included the German S3 guideline, the treatment recommendations of the German AGO-Mamma group, the NCCN guidelines, and the Cochrane database.
Results: Locoregional recurrences are treated with curative intent. Metastatic breast cancer must be treated on an individualized basis: The treatment should be continued as long as its benefits for the individual patient outweigh its adverse side effects. Endocrine treatment is indicated for all patients whose tumors are hormone-receptor positive or of unknown receptor status and who have enough time for a response to be seen. Chemotherapy should be given if the tumor is hormone-receptor negative, if a rapid response is urgently needed, or if endocrine treatment has failed to produce a response. Combination chemotherapy improves response rates and prolongs progression-free survival, yet it does not prolong overall survival in comparison to monochemotherapy. In HER2-positive patients, first-line treatment with trastuzumab and monochemotherapy prolongs overall survival. Other treatment options include angiogenesis inhibitors, various tyrosine kinases inhibitors, radiotherapy, bisphosphonates, surgical or other ablative treatment of metastases, or a combination of these approaches, applied either simultaneously or consecutively.
Conclusions: While locoregional recurrences of breast cancer should be treated with curative intent, breast cancer with distant metastases is currently not curable. It is treated with the intention of restoring and maintaining good quality of life and relieving symptoms due to the metastases, rather than prolonging survival.
Comment in
-
Correspondence (letter to the editor): Radical surgery.Dtsch Arztebl Int. 2010 Sep;107(36):629; author reply 629. doi: 10.3238/arztebl.2010.0629a. Epub 2010 Sep 10. Dtsch Arztebl Int. 2010. PMID: 20948777 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
References
-
- Kamby C, Vejborg I, Kristensen B, Olsen LO, Mouridsen HT. Metastatic pattern in recurrent breast cancer. Special reference to intrathoracic recurrences. Cancer. 1988;62:2226–2233. - PubMed
-
- Kamby C, Ejlertsen B, Andersen J, et al. The pattern of metastases in human breast cancer. Influence of systemic adjuvant therapy and impact on survival. Acta Oncol. 1988;27:715–719. - PubMed
-
- DGS. S3-Leitlinie der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Senologie. http://www.senologie.org. 2008.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources