Tag Archive | "anthracyclines"

Gene test helps select breast cancer chemotherapy

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Scientists have found a new and simple way to identify breast cancer patients who are likely to respond well to treatment with a common class of chemotherapy drugs, and predict who is unlikely to see any benefit.

The findings presented by researchers at the European Breast Cancer Conference in Spain on Thursday, mean doctors should be able to test patients, tailor treatment to them and avoid giving them toxic drugs that will not help.

By conducting a study called a meta-analysis of four large breast cancer trials including nearly 3,000 patients, the researchers found that an abnormality on chromosome 17, called CEP17, is a “highly significant indicator” that the tumor will respond to chemotherapy drugs called anthracyclines.

Anthracyclines are anti-tumor antibiotics that interfere with enzymes involved in DNA replication. They are widely used against a variety of cancers.

“Our aim was to identify patients for whom anthracyclines provided benefit … and to seek to ensure that future treatment was targeted to this group,” John Bartlett of Britain’s Edinburgh University, who led the study, said in a statement.

After adjusting for factors relating to the tumor and its treatment, the researchers found that if patients with CEP17 were treated with anthracyclines, they were around two-thirds more likely to survive, and to survive without a recurrence of cancer, than those not treated with anthracyclines.

“This suggests that only those patients with CEP17 tumors should receive anthracyclines,” Bartlett said.

The results provide more tools for doctors to make personalized, or tailored, medicine a reality in cancer care.

CEP17 is on the same chromosome as other genes known to be involved in breast cancer, such as HER-2, and can be detected with a simple test called fluorescent in situ hybridization, or FISH, which is carried out routinely in breast cancer patients.

Doctors can already also test for certain genes to tell whether a woman’s breast cancer is sensitive to estrogen and likely to benefit from hormone-blocking drugs like tamoxifen.

And patients whose breast tumors are HER-2 positive are often given the drug Herceptin, made by Roche Holding AG, which only works against these kinds of tumors.

Bartlett said the existence of a readily available test for CEP17 meant doctors could immediately start to better tailor chemotherapy to patient needs. He said extra work on CEP17 was needed to see if it could reveal more about breast cancers.

“It (CEP17) works as a biomarker for predicting response to anthracyclines, but we don’t know why it works. So our next step is to discover this and to try to make the cancers that don’t have the marker behave like the ones that do,” he said.

U.S. researchers published a study in January that found that changes in two genes on a small region of chromosome 8q made tumors resistant anthracyclines, but not other types of chemotherapy drug.

Source: Reuters

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Test ‘predicts cancer resistance’

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A genetic test could one day spot breast cancer patients most at risk of relapsing after treatment with a commonly used powerful chemotherapy.

The find could spare patients the side-effects of a drug destined to fail.

US researchers tested tumours for activity from two genes which appeared to cut the effectiveness of a class of cancer drugs.

UK cancer experts said it was another step towards “personalised” cancer treatment.

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The fact that a drug may be highly effective in some patients, but not others, cannot be easily explained.

Scientists now believe that the molecular properties of patients and their tumours may be the key to understanding this – and choosing the right type of treatment.

The team from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, in Boston, Massachusetts, scanned the genetic code of tumours taken from women who had undergone treatment, looking for differences which could account for differences in outcome, focusing on a single class of drugs called anthracyclines.

They found a small region on a single chromosome, and within it two genes which seemed to be unusually active in drug-resistant tumours.

When checks were made on samples from 85 other women, those with high levels of activity from these two genes were those who did worst when treated with anthracyclines.

They believe that by checking tumours in advance, treatment regimes could be changed to those involving alternative drug types.

‘Appropriate treatment’

Dr Eric Winer, director of the Breast Oncology Center at Dana-Farber, said: “While this work remains preliminary, it may ultimately help us use the anthracyclines in a much more thoughtful manner and allow us greater ability to personalise our breast cancer treatments to the tumour and the patient.”

UK cancer charities welcomed the research, although they cautioned that it could be some time before the results were confirmed and any test developed.

Meg McArthur, from Breakthrough Breast Cancer, said: “This research is a step towards discovering why some patients benefit more than others from a common form of chemotherapy.

“Research like this is important for identifying the appropriate treatment for individual patients.”

Oliver Childs, from Cancer Research UK, said: “Finding ways to predict how patients will respond to chemotherapy is important to help them benefit as much as possible from their cancer treatment.

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“It is too early to say whether this research will lead to a predictive test, but work like this inches us a little closer towards an age of personalised cancer treatment.”

Source: BBC NEWS

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