Some Women With Breast Cancer May Be Spared Chemo – but There’s a Catch

Breast cancer is the most common type of cancer among women worldwide. Research over the past few decades has unlocked many mysteries of this disease, leading to the creation of better detection tests and drugs for patients.

The disease is classified into different types based on the expression of certain proteins, like hormone receptors. More than half of all breast cancer patients have tumours that express these receptors. Traditionally, patients were treated with surgery, radiation, endocrine drugs (which specifically target the receptor) and chemotherapy. Although chemotherapy has revolutionised breast cancer treatment, it is associated with significant side-effects, such as nausea, vomiting, hair loss and fatigue. In the long term, it can also result in heart failure or leukaemia.

The choice of chemotherapy depends on a delicate balance between benefit and risk. However, not all patients will benefit from chemotherapy. Sometimes, some patients are unnecessarily given chemotherapy even when there is no potential benefit.

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A study recently published in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) offers a ray of hope in this regard. In the study, researchers have identified patients who will benefit most from chemotherapy based on the Oncotype Dx test. Oncotype Dx (genomic health) is the most widely used assay to determine the chances of a cancer recurring after treatment in a particular type of breast cancer (hormone receptor positive, Her2 negative, axillary node negative). It is also used to predict which patients will benefit from chemotherapy based on the expression of a panel of 21 genes in a tumour.

The assay predicts prognosis in terms of a recurrence score calculated between 0 and 100, staggered thus: