Treating Breast Cancer Brain Mets
Read further for an overview of current research and new therapies for breast cancer brain metastasis (BCBM).
Read further for an overview of current research and new therapies for breast cancer brain metastasis (BCBM).
Which therapy to use for the first, second or third line of treatment for metastatic breast cancer is now under rigorous research as more new therapies are available for treating MBC.
Do you need surgery or radiation to the breast after an MBC diagnosis? See the current research on this important question.
New research shows that stage 4 breast cancer with HER2-low expression can benefit from a new drug. Learn more.
This month, we begin a series about how scans are used to diagnose metastatic disease, look for new sites of metastasis, monitor progression, and assess treatment response.
To qualify for Tecentriq®-based immunotherapy, the cancer must test positive for the PD-L1 protein. Learn what researchers have found about PD-L1 and other biomarkers to identify patients suited for immunotherapy.
Did you know that some breast cancers can be defined as estrogen receptor low (ER-low) breast cancer?
When you’re first diagnosed, a pathologist runs a series of lab tests on the cancer cells to see what drives the breast cancer to grow. Estrogen receptor positive (ER positive) breast cancer cells have proteins that respond to signals from estrogen, telling the cells to grow. Your pathology report will tell you whether the cancer is ER positive, and how many cells in the tumor sample had estrogen receptors.
Right now, any breast cancer with at least 1% of tested cells showing estrogen receptors is considered ER positive. But researchers have found that ER positive cancers that have a low number of cells with estrogen receptors may respond differently to treatment. These breast cancers are called ER-low.
To learn more about reading your test results, understanding ER-low, and what current guidelines are for treating estrogen receptor low breast cancer, see below.
The treatment landscape for HER2 positive metastatic breast cancer has been rapidly evolving. Since February, the FDA has approved three new drugs to treat it: neratinib, tucatinib, and trastuzumab deruxtecan. More continue to look promising in clinical trials. Targeted therapies’ drugs that can attach to certain features of cancer cells have created more research avenues and may potentially lead to more treatment options.
To learn more about what it means to be HER2 positive, how the subtype is typically treated, the latest news in research, and what might be coming down the line, check out the information below.
See all articles on this site tagged with HER2 Positive breast cancer
June 2020
Recent FDA Approvals for Metastatic Breast Cancer
For the past two months, Metastatic Trial Talk brought you the latest about cancer and COVID-19. But while the world focused on coping with the pandemic, the Food and Drug Administration kept drug approvals moving. It approved in April two new medicines for metastatic breast cancer: tucatinib (Tukysa®), for HER2-positive disease, and sacituzumab govetican (Trodelvy®), for triple-negative disease.
Below, read about the FDA approval of each new medicine, who might benefit the most, how the treatments are given and what side effects each may cause. In addition, you’ll find information on the approval of a third drug, trastuzumab deruxtican (Enhertu®), announced in late December.
Scientists have discovered that the microenvironment–the cells that surround a tumor–plays a role in both how tumors grow and how they respond to treatment. Researchers also think that certain treatments, like immune checkpoint inhibitors, work in part because of the effect they have on the tumor’s microenvironment.
Below you will find articles and video presentations that discuss the microenvironment, different avenues of tumor microenvironment research scientists are pursuing, and clinical trials listed on BreastCancerTrials.org studying a treatment’s affect on a tumor’s microenvironment.