Abstract

The controversy surrounding high-dose chemotherapy (HDC) for breast cancer seems to have given place to skepticism about its efficacy, regardless of regimen or schedule, for any subset of patients with high-risk primary breast cancer (HRPBC) or metastatic disease. We review here the main publications in this field since 2006, focusing on updates of randomized trials comparing HDC with standard-dose chemotherapy. A meta-analysis of all 15 randomized HRPBC trials (n = 6102) has detected an absolute 13% event-free survival benefit in favor of HDC (P = 0.0001) at a median 6-year follow-up. The absolute differences in breast cancer-specific (7%) and overall survival (5%) did not reach statistical significance. Several retrospective subset analyses suggest that HDC may be particularly effective among patients with HER2-negative tumors, particularly if also hormone receptor negative (triple negative). A global event-free survival advantage favoring HDC has been shown in HRPBC trials, which seems to affect particularly patients with triple negative tumors. Event-free survival is a clinically relevant endpoint in the adjuvant setting, in which the goal of any treatment should be cure. Therefore, it seems that the current broad skepticism about HDC is unduly dismissive of this benefit. HDC remains a valid research strategy in appropriate subpopulations such as triple-negative HRPBC or oligometastatic disease.

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