We’re getting closer and closer to the point
at which the term “triple-negative breast cancer” is old hat. Based on research presented today at the 35th
San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium, we’ll soon be adding other receptors to
the definition. And we’ll be looking at
a whole set of genetic markers that define how the disease behaves and how it
responds to a growing field of cancer drugs.
Triple-negative breast cancer is defined by what it lacks: receptors for estrogen, progesterone, and her2/neu.
Androgen receptors may be added as an
essential marker in the disease. The
p53 gene continues to be a major player, as is the pik2ca mutation. Add this to the fact that many, but not all,
TNBC tumors are basal-like and many, but not all, of those are connected to the
BRCA genetic mutations, and you get a sense of the complexity of this disease.
“It’s a highly heterogeneous disease,” said Jennifer
Pietenpol , Ph.D., director of the Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center. Pietenpol
and
her colleagues have identified six named subtypes of triple-negative
and one unnamed variant, based on genomic and molecular analyses. Those named subtypes:
•Basal-like 1
•Basal-like 2
• Mesenchymal
• Mesenchymal/stem-like
• Iimmunomodulatory
• Androgen-driven luminal
Each of these responds differently to treatment, but Pietenpol
focused most on the two basal-like forms and the androgen (AR)-luminal subtype.
Basal-like cancers are extremely sensitive to cisplatin,
she said. AR-positive tumors also were
most likely to have pik3ca mutations and to respond to pik3ca inhibitors plus
cisplatin.
“Some of these patients had amazing responses to
treatments. They were pretty dramatic,”
she said.
TNBC cancers that are also positive for androgen receptors are
molecularly similar to prostate cancer and could potentially be treated
similarly. In Pietenpol’s research, AR-positive tumors responded well
to bicalutamine and to
17-DMAG, a drug that has been recently in clinical trials.
We’re on the road to targeted therapies for
TNBC. And a whole lot of hope.
“Genomics
are going to be the mainstay of personalized medicine,” said Thomas Westbrook,
Ph. D., of the Baylor College of Medicine.
NOTE: Pietenpol and her colleagues have developed a
web-based subtyping tool for TNBC tumor samples.
Read more about TNBC in my book, Surviving Triple-Negative Breast Cancer.
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1 comment:
Thanks so much for this, Patricia - very interesting reading.
One of the main reasons I agreed to undergo genetics testing was for research purposes - 'tho recent reports on androgens playing a part in Triple Negative tumours also dinged a big-bell in my awareness, as 20 years ago I had exceptionally high testosterone levels ...
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