Central nervous system involvement in breast cancer patients: Is the therapeutic landscape changing too slowly?

C Fontanella, E De Carlo, M Cinausero… - Cancer Treatment …, 2016 - Elsevier
C Fontanella, E De Carlo, M Cinausero, G Pelizzari, I Venuti, F Puglisi
Cancer Treatment Reviews, 2016Elsevier
Central nervous system (CNS) involvement from breast cancer (BC) has been historically
considered a relatively rare event. However, the development of new therapeutic strategies
with a better control of extra-cranial disease and a longer overall survival (OS) has
determined an increased incidence of brain metastases. Patients with HER2-positive or
triple negative BC have higher occurrence of CNS involvement than patients with luminal-
like disease. Moreover, after development of brain metastases, the prognosis is highly …
Abstract
Central nervous system (CNS) involvement from breast cancer (BC) has been historically considered a relatively rare event. However, the development of new therapeutic strategies with a better control of extra-cranial disease and a longer overall survival (OS) has determined an increased incidence of brain metastases. Patients with HER2-positive or triple negative BC have higher occurrence of CNS involvement than patients with luminal-like disease. Moreover, after development of brain metastases, the prognosis is highly influenced by biological subtype. In patients with multiple brain metastases who experience important neurological symptoms, palliative treatment, with or without whole brain radiation therapy (WBRT), needs to be considered the first step of a multidisciplinary therapeutic approach. Patients with a good performance status and 1–3 brain lesions should be considered for radical surgery; patients technically inoperable with 4–5 metastases smaller than 3 cm may undergo stereotactic radiosurgery. The role of systemic therapy in the management of patients with brain metastases is controversial. Preliminary data suggest that systemic therapy after WBRT may improve survival in BC patients with brain lesions. In patients with HER2-positive disease, several retrospective or post hoc analyses showed a longer brain progression-free survival with trastuzumab in combination with or followed by other anti-HER2 drugs (such as pertuzumab, lapatinib, and T-DM1). Until now, no new strategies or drugs are available for triple-negative and luminal-like BC.
Elsevier
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果