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Safe side effect profile for HER-2 positive breast cancer patients using trastuzumab
Jun 6, 2006 - 1:29:00 AM, Reviewed by: Dr. Priya Saxena
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"We hoped also to show that trastuzumab did not add complications to radiation treatment, and the current study has certainly proven that, providing good news for many women."
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By Mayo Clinic,
Researchers in the North Central Cancer Treatment Group (NCCTG) have shown that patients who receive trastuzumab at the same time as post-chemotherapy radiation treatments for HER-2 positive breast cancer have no more risk for major side effects or complications than those who do not receive the drug.
This study resulted from NCCTG clinical trial N9831, from which breakthrough treatment findings were presented at ASCO 2005. "The original N9831 study showed that trastuzumab reduced the recurrence of HER-2 positive breast cancer about 50 percent," says Dr. Halyard, a radiation oncologist at Mayo Clinic Arizona and lead author of today's study. "We hoped also to show that trastuzumab did not add complications to radiation treatment, and the current study has certainly proven that, providing good news for many women."
About 25 percent to 30 percent of breast cancers produce an overabundance of a growth-promoting protein called human epidermal growth factor receptor (HER-2). These tumors tend to grow faster and are generally more likely to recur than tumors that do not overproduce HER-2. Trastuzumab is the first identified monoclonal antibody designed specifically to attack this overexpressed protein, and is used as a follow-on treatment to chemotherapy. A monoclonal antibody is a laboratory-engineered protein that helps the body's immune system fight foreign invaders such as cancer.
Dr. Halyard's study looked at the side effects related to adding trastuzumab to radiation therapy. In the 1,460 patients who received radiation in the original N9831 group, there was no significant difference in the incidence of skin reactions, pneumonitis, dyspnea, cough, esophageal dysphagia or neutropenia between those who received trastuzumab (908), and those who did not (552). Additionally, the researchers report that within the group of 1,286 patients who received trastuzumab, those who had radiation (908) were no more likely to have cardiac complications than those who did not (378).
- Mayo Clinic's Michele Halyard, M.D., presented these findings on June 5, at the 2006 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting in Atlanta.
cancercenter.mayo.edu/mayo/research/womens_cancer
The NCCTG trastuzumab trial was led by Mayo Clinic Jacksonville's Edith Perez, M.D., with Dr. Halyard as a co-investigator. It was a cooperative effort with the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG), the Southwest Oncology Group (SWOG), and the Cancer and Leukemia Group B (CALGB). Study co-investigators included Mayo Clinic Rochester's Thomas Pisansky, M.D.; and Amylou Dueck, Ph.D.; along with Lori Pierce, M.D., University of Michigan; Lawrence Solin, M.D., University of Pennsylvania; and Lawrence Marks, M.D., Duke University.
The study presented is one of several studies resulting from information gained in NCCTG clinical trial N9831. NCCTG is a national clinical research group sponsored by the National Cancer Institute. Research is based at Mayo Clinic. NCCTG consists of a network of cancer specialists at community clinics, hospitals and medical centers in the United States, Canada and Mexico. The group is dedicated to bringing clinical trials with promising new cancer therapies to communities where patients live.
Trastuzumab, trade name Herceptin�, is manufactured by Genentech, which provided some support for this study, along with the National Institutes of Health and the Breast Cancer Research Foundation.
For more information on breast cancer research at Mayo Clinic, visit http://cancercenter.mayo.edu/mayo/research/womens_cancer. To find out more about NCCTG and available clinical trials, visit http://ncctg.
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