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12a - High-dose chemotherapy in breast cancer
- Edited by Zenon Rayter, Bristol Royal Infirmary, Janine Mansi, St George's Hospital Medical School, University of London
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- Book:
- Medical Therapy of Breast Cancer
- Published online:
- 06 January 2010
- Print publication:
- 09 January 2003, pp 310-328
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- Chapter
- Export citation
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Summary
Background: chemotherapy of breast cancer – theory and practice
Breast cancer is a partially chemotherapy sensitive neoplasm. Patients with metastases will usually achieve a degree of tumour response, with amelioration of the distressing symptoms of cancer, and some degree of survival prolongation. Some patients who are close to death, with impending failure of crucial organ systems, will be restored to reasonably good health, and will go on to live for months, or in some cases for years. Most responses are partial, however, and in all but exceptional cases, are temporary. Durable complete remission is only anecdotally reported (Cold et al., 1993; Greenberg et al., 1996).
Chemotherapy given as an adjuvant treatment to patients with earlier stage disease has a greater survival impact, and may contribute to cure (Early Breast Cancer Trialists’ Collaborative Group, 1992). This is consistent with the results of the classic experiments of Skipper and Schabel, which suggested that tumours grew exponentially with a constant growth rate, and that chemotherapy killed a constant proportion of cells. These investigators also found that there was an invariably inverse relationship between the size of a tumour and its curability by chemotherapy. Their model had profound implications for the concept of adjuvant systemic therapy, and appeared to be particularly relevant to breast cancer therapeutics (Skipper & Schabel, 1988). While several generations of studies have confirmed that adjuvant chemotherapy has a beneficial impact in patients with both node-positive and node-negative breast cancer, the impact is less than might have been expected on the basis of the Skipper–Schabel model (Norton & Simon, 1986).