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International Expert Consensus on Primary Systemic Therapy in the Management of Early Breast Cancer: Highlights of the Fifth Symposium on Primary Systemic Therapy in the Management of Operable Breast Cancer, Cremona, Italy (2013)

Authors :
Vladimir Semiglazov
Christos Hatzis
Daniele Generali
Sarah C. Darby
Gaia Schiavon
Alberto Bottini
Thorsten Kühn
Serena Di Cosimo
Giuseppe Curigliano
Alfredo Berruti
Michael A. Jacobs
Vito Amoroso
Peter A. Barry
Alessandra Gennari
Kerstin Hermelink
Andrea Ravelli
Rebecca Pedersini
Anna Sapino
Maria Grazia Daidone
Paolo Pedrazzoli
Lucia Vassalli
Massimo Cristofanilli
Fraser Symmans
Edda Simoncini
Adrian L. Harris
Maria Rosa Cappelletti
Clifford A. Hudis
Andreas Makris
Luigi Dogliotti
Gunter von Minckwitz
Thomas A. Buchholz
Stephen B. Fox
Mitchell Dowsett
Amoroso, Vito
Generali, Daniele
Buchholz, Thoma
Cristofanilli, Massimo
Pedersini, Rebecca
Curigliano, Giuseppe
Daidone, Maria Grazia
Di Cosimo, Serena
Dowsett, Mitchell
Fox, Stephen
Harris, Adrian L.
Makris, Andrea
Vassalli, Lucia
Ravelli, Andrea
Cappelletti, Maria Rosa
Hatzis, Christo
Hudis, Clifford A.
Pedrazzoli, Paolo
Sapino, Anna
Semiglazov, Vladimir
Von Minckwitz, Gunter
Simoncini, Edda L.
Jacobs, Michael A.
Barry, Peter
Kühn, Thorsten
Darby, Sarah
Hermelink, Kerstin
Symmans, Fraser
Gennari, Alessandra
Schiavon, Gaia
Dogliotti, Luigi
Berruti, Alfredo
Bottini, Alberto
Source :
Europe PubMed Central
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2015.

Abstract

Expert consensus-based recommendations regarding key issues in the use of primary (or neoadjuvant) systemic treatment (PST) in patients with early breast cancer are a valuable resource for practising oncologists. PST remains a valuable therapeutic approach for the assessment of biological antitumor activity and clinical efficacy of new treatments in clinical trials. Neoadjuvant trials provide endpoints, such as pathological complete response (pCR) to treatment, that potentially translate into meaningful improvements in overall survival and disease-free survival. Neoadjuvant trials need fewer patients and are less expensive than adjuvant trial, and the endpoint of pCR is achieved in months, rather than years. For these reasons, the neoadjuvant setting is ideal for testing emerging targeted therapies in early breast cancer. Although pCR is an early clinical endpoint, its role as a surrogate for long-term outcomes is the key issue. New and better predictors of treatment efficacy are needed to improve treatment and outcomes. After PST, accurate management of post-treatment residual disease is mandatory. The surgery of the sentinel lymph-node could be an acceptable option to spare the axillary dissection in case of clinical negativity (N0) of the axilla at the diagnosis and/or after PST. No data exists yet to support the modulation of the extent of locoregional radiation therapy on the basis of the response attained after PST although trials are underway.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Europe PubMed Central
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6525f00932eaeab8ba923643c9b38431