Abstract
With improvements in chemotherapy regimens, targeted therapies, and our fundamental understanding of the relationship of tumor subtype and pathologic complete response (pCR), there has been dramatic improvement in pCR rates in the past decade, especially among triple-negative and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-positive breast cancers. Rates of pCR in these groups of patients can be in the 60 % range and thus question the paradigm for the necessity of breast and nodal surgery in all cases, particularly when the patient will be receiving adjuvant local therapy with radiotherapy. Current practice for patients who respond well to neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NCT) is often to proceed with the same breast and axillary procedures as would have been offered women who had not received NCT, regardless of the apparent clinical response. Given these high response rates in defined subgroups among exceptional responders it is appropriate to question whether surgery is now a redundant procedure in their overall management. Further, definitive radiation without surgical resection with or without systemic therapy has been proven effective for several other malignant disease sites including some stages of esophageal, anal, laryngeal, prostate, cervical, and lung carcinoma. The main impediments for potential elimination of surgery have been the fact that prior and current standard and functional breast imaging methods are incapable of accurate prediction of residual disease and that integrating percutaneous biopsy of the breast primary and nodes following NCT may circumvent this issue. This article highlights historical attempts at omission of surgery following NCT in an earlier era, the current status of breast and nodal imaging to predict residual carcinoma, and ongoing and planned trials designed to identify appropriate patients who might be selected for clinical trials designed to test the safety of selected elimination of breast cancer surgery in percutaneous image-guided biopsy-proven exceptional responders to NCT.
Highlights
A key advantage of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NCT) is the opportunity to assess response early during treatment as a predictor of pathologic complete response at the end of therapy [1, 2]
With improvements in chemotherapy regimens and targeted therapies according to tumor subtype and nodal status, pathologic complete response (pCR) rates have dramatically improved over recent decades, van la Parra and Kuerer Breast Cancer Research (2016) 18:28 especially in TN and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-positive breast cancer
Given these high response rates in defined subgroups among exceptional responders it is appropriate to question whether surgery is a redundant procedure in their overall management, when patients will often routinely be treated with adjuvant radiotherapy
Summary
A key advantage of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NCT) is the opportunity to assess response early during treatment as a predictor of pathologic complete response (pCR) at the end of therapy [1, 2]. With improvements in chemotherapy regimens and targeted therapies according to tumor subtype and nodal status (e.g., trastuzumab and pertuzumab), pCR rates have dramatically improved over recent decades, van la Parra and Kuerer Breast Cancer Research (2016) 18:28 especially in TN and HER2-positive breast cancer. Current practice for patients who respond well to NCT is often to proceed with the same breast and axillary procedures as would have been offered in women who had not received NCT, regardless of the apparent clinical response Given these high response rates in defined subgroups among exceptional responders it is appropriate to question whether surgery is a redundant procedure in their overall management, when patients will often routinely be treated with adjuvant radiotherapy.
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