Metastatic breast cancer treatment: Difference between revisions
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== Overview == | == Overview == | ||
With rare exception, metastatic breast cancer is an incurable but treatable illness. | With rare exception, metastatic breast cancer is an incurable but treatable illness. Currently, it is managed as a chronic disease, especially the category that is ER-positive with predominantly bone or soft tissue metastasis. Chemotherapy, biologic therapy and endocrine therapy are all considered in the treatment of meatastatic breast cancer. | ||
== Principles of therapy == | == Principles of therapy == |
Revision as of 21:57, 29 November 2011
Breast Cancer Microchapters |
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Metastatic breast cancer treatment On the Web |
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Risk calculators and risk factors for Metastatic breast cancer treatment |
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1], Assistant Editor-in-Chief Jack Khouri
Overview
With rare exception, metastatic breast cancer is an incurable but treatable illness. Currently, it is managed as a chronic disease, especially the category that is ER-positive with predominantly bone or soft tissue metastasis. Chemotherapy, biologic therapy and endocrine therapy are all considered in the treatment of meatastatic breast cancer.
Principles of therapy
- The principles of therapy are prolonging survival, improving quality of life and avoiding treatment-induced toxicity. Given that treatment is palliative, patients should be given treatment holidays in order to reduce drug-induced toxicity.
- HER2 overexpression and hormone receptor status are very important factors that guide therapy and influence prognosis.
- Multiagent chemotherapy regimens don't show significant survival benefit compared to single-drug regimens.