Islamabad, Dec 12 : Nearly one-fifth of all
metastatic breast cancer patients develop brain metastases and have
significantly shorter overall survival than patients who do not have brain
involvement. One way to improve the affected patients' survival might be to
prevent the brain metastases from arising in the first place. With that in mind,
researchers have been working on a predictive model that accurately identifies
these high risk patients.
Now, Veeraiah Siripurapu, M.D., and colleagues
from Fox Chase Cancer Center have verified several factors -- including high
tumor grade, negative progesterone receptor status, and inflammatory breast
cancer -- that are associated with an increased risk.
"If we can identify
those patients who are predisposed to brain metastases, we may be able to mirror
the model used in small cell lung cancer where prophylactic cranial irradiation
has decreased the frequency of brain metastases and improved patient survival,"
says Siripurapu, a surgical oncology fellow at Fox Chase, who will present the
new data at the 33rd Annual San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.
In this
study, Siripurapu and colleagues identified 49 patients with brain metastases
who were included in a prospectively-collected database of breast cancer
patients. They compared these patients with control patients who had similar
tumor size, nodal status, and estrogen receptor status at diagnosis but lacked
brain tumors. The patients with brain metastases had a median overall survival
of just 38.6 months compared with the group of control patients which had not
reached a median overall survival with a mean follow-up of 100
months.
When the team compared the tumor characteristics of the two
patient groups, they found that prior non-brain metastases, high nuclear tumor
grade, progesterone receptor negativity, and inflammatory breast cancer were
associated with an increased risk of brain metastases in a univariate analysis
with high nuclear grade remaining significant in a multivariable
analysis.
"The data are accumulating in the literature with regard to
what tumor characteristics are associated with brain metastases, but there is no
consensus on what should be included in a model to predict risk," Siripurapu
says. "Factors such as age, tumor grade, lobular or mixed histology, estrogen
receptor negativity, Her2/Neu status, and number of extra-cranial metastases
have all been thrown into the mix, and some investigators have suggested
recently that a predictive tool can be formulated. We agree with
that."
"Looking at our case-control analysis -- which is a novel approach
for this question -- we also found that high tumor grade was certainly a marked
factor in risk. Progesterone receptor negativity and a diagnosis of inflammatory
breast cancer may also be valuable additions to a predictive model." Siripurapu
added.
Siripurapu cautions that it is too early to say how a predictive
model might alter patient care.
"At a minimum, we might be able to use it
to identify patients who should be followed more closely," he says. "Ultimately,
we might be able to use in a preventive treatment strategy, but that would
require having a model that has higher sensitivity and specificity than we can
achieve right now."
Finally, while prophylactic cranial irradiation has
improved overall survival in patients with small cell lung cancer, Siripurapu is
cautious that researchers would need to prove that this was also true for breast
cancer patients before such an approach could be widely adopted. "The importance
of piecing together a strong predictive model is that it would allow us to test
the possibility in a randomized clinical
trial."
Ends
SA/EN
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» New risk factors for brain metastases in breast cancer patients uncovered
New risk factors for brain metastases in breast cancer patients uncovered
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