Abstract

We present an interesting case of a 56-year-old female diagnosed with invasive high-grade triple-negative breast cancer, who developed diffuse liver metastases following lumpectomy and combination chemotherapy with docetaxel, doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide, re-excision and radiation therapy. Restaging CT and PET scans revealed massive involvement of the liver. She was treated with a combination of gene targeted and cytotoxic chemotherapy including capecitabine, erlotinib, bevacizumab and phenylbutyrate. She tested weakly positive for HER-2 despite prior negative FISH, which prompted us to add trastuzumab to her regimen. Baseline CT revealed five liver tumors—the sum of the products of the two largest perpendicular diameters was 110 cm2. Follow-up CT after three months of treatment revealed 62% decrease in total tumor load. More than 50% decrease in tumor size persisted on two follow-up CT scans, confirming partial response. She developed progressive disease after 15 months of treatment. A group of 16 women, including this patient, diagnosed with triple negative breast cancer with distant metastases were treated by our team with a combination of gene targeted therapy and chemotherapy. Six percent of patients obtained partial response, 25% minor response, 31% stable disease, and 38% progressive disease. The median duration of treatment in patients who relapsed after the second-, third- and fourth- to seventh-lines of chemotherapy was 59 weeks, 22 weeks and 17 weeks, respectively. Comparison of results obtained with cytotoxic chemotherapy revealed that MDT in the second- and third-lines was only nine and four weeks, respectively. In conclusion, this case report indicates that it is possible to obtain durable objective response of recurrent TNBC with a combination of gene targeted agents.

Highlights

  • Gene expression studies have identified multiple subtypes of breast cancer with different “genetic signatures” [1,2]

  • We present an interesting case of a 56-year-old female diagnosed with invasive high-grade triple-negative breast cancer, who developed diffuse liver metastases following lumpectomy and combination chemotherapy with docetaxel, doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide, re-excision and radiation therapy

  • Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) which does not over-express HER-2, estrogen receptor, or progesterone receptor creates the biggest challenge in the treatment of metastatic breast disease [3]

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Summary

Introduction

Gene expression studies have identified multiple subtypes of breast cancer with different “genetic signatures” [1,2]. The mean time to distant metastases with TNBC is approximately 50% shorter than that of other breast cancer groups [1]. The mean time to death for patients diagnosed with TNBC is 4.2 years compared to 6 years for other groups [1]. Due to the absence of specific genetic markers, gene-targeted therapy is not often used for TNBC compared to other cancers. Patients with TNBC relapse quickly on chemotherapy, and, as a result the median duration of treatment (MDT) was proposed as a surrogate for duration of treatment response [4,5]. The feedback up-regulation of compensatory signaling networks has been observed with single gene targeted agents that were not successful in the treatment of TNBC. We report the successful treatment of metastatic TNBC with combination targeted therapy, and we dis-. Cuss MDT for a group of 16 women including this patient, whose treatment was based on the same principle

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