Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 5 | Page 20

WOMEN'S HEALTH BREAST CANCER SUCCESS: De-escalate Treatment for All? Not Yet Beth Riley, MD, FACP T he death rate for breast cancer in the US has steadily declined since the mid-1990s. This is largely attribut- able to a combination of increased screening and better, more effective targeted therapies. A better understanding of disease biology has allowed for a de-escalation of treatment chronicled in the lay and profes- sional press. We no longer routinely perform an axillary dissection with positive sentinel lymph nodes thus reducing the risk of lymph- edema. Genomic tests help guide chemotherapy decision-making in select women with estrogen positive breast cancer. Oncotype DX is a 21-gene expression assay used routine- ly in women with hormone receptor positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)- negative, axillary node negative breast cancer. Typically, patients are classified in one of three score groups: low (<18), intermediate (18-31) or high (>31). Clinical decision-making was well-defined for those who needed (high score) or did not need (low score) chemotherapy, however data for those in the intermediate category was less clear. The recent TAILOR X trial broadened the cohort of women who could safely 18 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE forego chemotherapy and be treated with endocrine therapy alone. This trial demonstrated that all women older than 50 years of age with hormone receptor positive, HER2 negative, node negative breast cancer and a recurrence score between 0-25 could forego chemotherapy without an impact on recurrence. The lead authors of the study noted that “when guided by the test, (chemotherapy)… can be limited to the 30 percent whom we can predict will benefit (1,2).” TAILOR X therefore translates to less therapy and less short and long-term toxicity for the majority of women with early stage hormone receptor positive, HER2 negative breast cancer without compromising outcome. Based on the broad impact to women across the US with early stage breast cancer, this was presented at the plenary session during the 2018 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) meeting in June. Based on the number of women in the US these data affected, this was also a favorite of the lay press highlighted in national papers and the television nightly news. However, one important exception was not well described in the lay press – the disparity in results for women under the age of 50. In this cohort, there was a sustained benefit for chemotherapy in those women with a mid-range score. In women under the age of 50, only those with a low score (<11)