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BREAST CANCER Oncology
John Dewar
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Breast Cancer Commonest cancer in women
2nd commonest cause of death from cancer in women Survival improving – 5 yr. survival improved from 56% 1970 to 79% in 1999 (year of diagnosis) Increasing incidence – ageing population
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Presentation Screening – age 50-64(70), small, impalpable
Symptomatic – lump in breast 8% with distant metastases 8% locally advanced/inoperable 84% operable
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TREATMENT Surgery Radiotherapy Systemic therapy hormonal therapy
cytotoxic chemotherapy immunotherapy
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RADIOTHERAPY Postoperatively to breast/chest wall
nodal areas: axilla, supraclavicular fossa, internal mammary nodes Primary radical for locally advanced Palliatively to painful bony mets, skin deposits, brain mets etc.
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POSTOPERATIVE RADIOTHERAPY
Reduces the risk of local recurrence by about two thirds: 60% to 20% 30% to 10% 3% to 1%
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POSTOPERATIVE RADIOTHERAPY
All patients being treated conservatively (wide local excision/lumpectomy) Mastectomy patients selectively – large tumour, extensive nodal involvement, involved margins etc.
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Postoperative Radiotherapy – acute side effects
Skin erythema to moist desquamation Tiredness Dysphagia if irradiating supraclavicular fossa No alopecia
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Postoperative Radiotherapy – late effects
Local fibrosis and telangectasia Lung fibrosis (rarely symptomatic) Cardiac damage (ischaemic heart disease) – rarer now treatment better planned
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Postoperative Radiotherapy – late effects
Survival Overall 5% improvement in breast cancer survival (at 15 yrs.) for 20% improvement in local control (4% improvement in overall survival) Localised local recurrence can act as nidus for distant metastases
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SYSTEMIC THERAPY – adjuvant
Most operable, why not curable? Occult distant metastases at presentation Systemic therapy after surgery reduces the risk of recurrence and death – adjuvant therapy
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SYSTEMIC THERAPY – adjuvant
Hormone therapy: ovarian ablation, tamoxifen, aromatase inhibitors (ER/Pg +ve patients only) Cytotoxic chemotherapy: CMF, doxirubicin/epirubicin, taxanes Trastuzumab [Herceptin] All decrease odds of death by about 17%, absolute benefit of about 6% at 10 years.
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SYSTEMIC THERAPY – adjuvant: side effects
Hormone therapy: Infertility Menopausal symptoms Weight gain Endometrial cancer Deep venous thrombosis Chemotherapy Nausea & vomiting Infertility Alopecia Neutropenia (sepsis) Mouth ulcers Lassitude
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METASTATIC DISEASE Incurable but treatable
Optimise quality of life and survival Median survival with mets: 2 years (20% at 5 yrs.) Varies from acute aggressive disease to chronic disease (like diabetes, renal failure etc.)
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METASTATIC DISEASE Assess extent of disease
Stage: local recurrence, lung, liver, bone Hormone receptor status HER2 receptor status
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METASTATIC DISEASE Local problems
Palliative radiotherapy: bony mets, brain mets etc. Drainage of pleural or peritoneal effusions Pining of pathological fractures
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METASTATIC DISEASE Systemic therapy
Hormone therapy if ER/Pg +ve Chemotherapy Bisphosphonates for bony mets Trastuzumab if HER2 +ve
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METASTATIC DISEASE Systemic therapy
ER +ve: Hormonal agents: ovarian ablation, aromatase inhibitors, tamoxifen, progestagens in sequence unless liver mets or lymphangitis carcinomatosa when usually chemotherapy
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METASTATIC DISEASE Chemotherapy: CMF, anthracyclines, taxanes, capcitabine etc. etc. Use in sequence so long as respond and patient fit
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BREAST CANCER Need multidisciplinary management: nurses, surgeons, radiologists, pathologists, oncologists, GP. etc. etc. Different patients have different needs Most will need considerable support Major impact on the patients but also their families
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