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SYSTEMIC MANAGEMENT OF BREAST CANCER

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SYSTEMIC MANAGEMENT OF BREAST CANCER Dr Alice Musibi Medical Oncologist KENYATTA NATIONAL HOSPITAL – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SYSTEMIC MANAGEMENT OF BREAST CANCER


1
SYSTEMIC MANAGEMENT OF BREAST CANCER
  • Dr Alice Musibi
  • Medical Oncologist
  • KENYATTA NATIONAL HOSPITAL

2
BREAST CANCER
  • INTRODUCTION
  • Is one of the deadliest and most common cancers
    ailing women all over the world
  • In Australia 1 in 13 women will develop ca breast
    at sometime in her life
  • In USA 215,990 women will be found to have
    invasive ca breast in 2004
  • More common in older than younger women with
    average age of diagnosis of 64 years

3
CANCER IN NAIROBI (KENYA)
  • A total of 2,716 cases were registered,
    comprising of 1246 men and 1470 women between
    2000-2003
  • Breast cancer was leading with 22.9 followed by
    cervical cancer with 19.3
  • The mean age of diagnosis was 45 years

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BREAST CANCER TREND IN NAIROBI
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Treatment
  • Local management
  • 18th century Louis Petit of France - total
    mastectomy and excision of axillary's lymph nodes
  • 1895 - William Halstead - popularized radical
    mastectomy
  • Harvey Cushing - extended radical - internal
    mammary chain excised after splitting the
    mediastinum
  • 1923-1937 - local excision and radium needles.
  • Conventional radiotherapy

10
Out-come
  • Poor overall results of survival
  • Frequent local recurrence and distant metastases
  • Treatment worse than disease
  • Concept of quality life
  • Womens insistence for breast preservation

11
Treatment
  • Multidisciplinary
  • Surgery
  • Chemotherapy, hormonal therapy, immunotherapy
  • Radiation therapy
  • Palliative therapy
  • Occupational/physiotherapy
  • Lymph edema therapy
  • etc

12
Systemic therapy
  • Types
  • Primary induction therapy
  • Neo-adjuvant chemotherapy
  • Adjuvant chemotherapy
  • Palliative
  • Associated with
  • a decrease in the death rate
  • prolonged relapse-free survivals
  • Acute and chronic side effects

13
Systemic therapy- combination
  • Maximum cell kill
  • Tolerable range of toxicity for each drug
  • Broader range of interaction between drugs and
    tumor cells
  • Less chance of developing cellular drug
    resistance

14
Adjuvant systemic therapy
  • For patients at risk of disease recurrence after
    treatment of primary tumior
  • Known tumor or maximum bulk should be removed
  • Chemotherapy started as soon as possible post op
  • Effective chemotherapy must be used at maximally
    tolerated doses
  • Usually for a period (6-8 cycles)
  • Milan CMF trial (overview)-
  • CMF vs. surgery alone
  • Relapse free survival- median 19.4
  • benefits in pre-menopausal patients
  • (Bonnadona G et al N Engl. J Med 1995332901)

15
Neo-adjuvant chemotherapy
  • Systemic therapy given preoperatively
  • Advantage
  • Early exposure to micro-metastasis
  • Tumor response measurable
  • Reduce tumor bulk so less extensive surgery
  • Disadvantage
  • May delay surgery in tumors which may turn out to
    be chemo-resistant
  • May obscure real extent of disease

16
Choice of treatment regime
  • Depends on prognostic factors for
    recurrence/survival
  • Age
  • tumour size,
  • nodal status
  • histologic grade,
  • hormone receptors,
  • ??Her-2/neu over-expression (about 40 of breast
    cancers)
  • ?Lymphatic/vascular invasion)
  • Estimated benefit of therapy in terms of absolute
    risk reduction of relapse and death.
  • Estimation of the toxicity associated with
    therapy
  • COST

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Prognosis
  • Five year relative survival is dependent on the
    stage of breast cancer at diagnosis
  • Stage Survival rate
  • 0 100
  • I 98
  • IIA 88
  • IIB 76
  • IIIA 56
  • IIIB 49
  • IV 16
  • (Overview American Cancer Society 2003)

19
Post-surgical Mx of breast cancer (KNH)
1989-2000
  • Surgery - 374 patients
  • Chemotherapy
  • Adjuvant - 22 (5.8)
  • Metastatic -21
  • Radiotherapy
  • Adjuvant - 46 (12.4)
  • Palliation - 53
  • Hormone therapy (tamoxifen) - 126 (33.7)
  • East African Medical Journal 2002 79(3) 156-162

20
Metastatic breast cancer (MBC)
  • MBC is considered an incurable disease.
  • majority of patients with MBC do not survive
    beyond 5 years after diagnosis.
  • Treatment usually is palliative with systemic
    therapy including
  • chemotherapy
  • hormonal treatment
  • biologic therapy (e.g. Trastuzumab)
  • Pain control

21
MBC -2
  • The surgery of breast tumors with distant
    metastases has been indicated to
  • prevent local complications (toilet surgery)
  • Removal of the metastatic lesions in selected
    patients (single brain, liver, bone or pulmonary
    lesions).
  • Surgery of the primary tumor can actually improve
    survival of metastatic breast cancer.
  • especially in patients with only bone metastases
  • (JCO, Vol 24, No 18 (June 20), 2006 pp.
    2743-2749)

22
Many of our women are presenting like this!!
23
Language
Lack of medical insurance
Poverty
Fears
False beliefs
Fatalism
Lack of information
Knowledge
Attitude
Behavior
24
Risk factors
  • Normal lifetime risk of developing breast cancer
    in white women is 1 in 8 or 9
  • There is no family history in over 75 of
    patients
  • Most women with breast cancer do not have any
    identifiable risk factors

25
Risk factors
  • Age
  • Ethnicity more cancer in white women but more
    mortality in blacks
  • Family history of breast cancer
  • Previous history of personal breast cancer gives
    1-2 risk of contralateral breast cancer/year
  • Previous history of ovarian or endometrial
    cancers
  • Prolonged estrogen exposure
  • Early menarche (under age 12)/late menopause
    (after age 50)
  • Late first pregnancy/nulliparous/no full-term
    pregnancy (1.5 times higher incidence)
  • Hormone replacement therapy especially high
    estrogen based pills but more so the combined
    pills
  • Genetic predisposition
  • BRCA1 (85)
  • BRCA2
  • p53 gene 1 in women with cancer of breast
    below 40 years
  • Lifestyle factors
  • Dietary factors particularly increased fat
    consumption
  • Obesity
  • Lack of exercise
  • Alcohol consumption
  • Smoking (???)
  • Prior Radiation therapy
  • Atypical epithelial hyperplasia of the breast
  • Fibrocystic disease with proliferative changes
  • Lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS)

26
Recommendations
27
Recommendations
  • Clinical breast examination
  • U/S
  • Mammography
  • MRI scans of breast
  • Genetic mapping

28
Recommendations
  • Facilities
  • Cancer centres 1 (KNH)
  • Laboratories
  • ordinary histopathology
  • immunohistochemical studies
  • KEMRI mainly research purposes
  • Private hosp (Nbi, AKUH) all send the specimens
    to SA or Italy
  • Radiotherapy units 2

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