Literature DB >> 19761144

Prolonged clinical benefit from platinum-based chemotherapy in a patient with metastatic triple negative breast cancer.

M Krockenberger1, J B Engel, S Häusler, J Dietl, A Honig.   

Abstract

Triple negative breast cancer is a recently defined subgroup of tumors which do not express receptors for estrogen or progesterone and which do not show any overexpression of HER2 receptors. Tumors with these histopathologic features have an unfavorable prognosis and at present there is no standard chemotherapy regimen available. However, experimental studies and very recently some clinical data showed a benefit from platinum-based chemotherapy. We treated a 52-year-old caucasian female with metastatic triple negative breast cancer. She suffered from extensive liver disease resistant to taxane treatment and yttrium radiotherapy. Cisplatin/ifosfamide (12 cycles) induced regression of the liver metastasis from over 30 cm to 6 cm as revealed by CT scan. Dose-limiting toxicity was impairment of renal function and pancytopenia. The patient has now been stable for over ten months on a metronomic regimen of oral cyclophosphamide. This case report adds to recent evidence suggesting good clinical benefits of platinum-based regimens in early and advanced triple negative breast cancers.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19761144

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Gynaecol Oncol        ISSN: 0392-2936            Impact factor:   0.196


  1 in total

1.  Correlation of rs1799793 polymorphism in ERCC2 and the clinical response to platinum-based chemotherapy in patients with triple negative breast cancer.

Authors:  Jun Lu; Haitao Zhao; Sha Li; Zhongze Tian; Xianghui Zhu; Hongyi Wang; Hua Fu
Journal:  Int J Clin Exp Med       Date:  2015-02-15
  1 in total

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