| Literature DB >> 27289552 |
Michail Ignatiadis1, Brigitte Rack2, Francoise Rothé3, Sabine Riethdorf4, Charles Decraene5, Hervé Bonnefoi6, Christian Dittrich7, Carlo Messina8, Melanie Beauvois9, Elisabeth Trapp2, Theodora Goulioti10, Konstantinos Tryfonidis9, Klaus Pantel4, Madeline Repollet11, Wolfgang Janni12, Martine Piccart13, Christos Sotiriou14, Saskia Litiere9, Jean-Yves Pierga15.
Abstract
There is increasing evidence that breast cancer evolves over time under the selection pressure of systemic treatment. Today, treatment decisions in early breast cancer are based on primary tumour characteristics without considering the disease evolution. Chemoresistant micrometastatic disease is poorly characterised and thus it is not used in current clinical practice as a tool to personalise treatment approaches. The detection of chemoresistant circulating tumour cells (CTCs) has been shown to be associated with worse prognosis in early breast cancer. The ongoing Treat CTC trial is the first international, liquid biopsy-based trial evaluating the concept of targeting chemoresistant minimal residual disease: detection of CTCs following adjuvant chemotherapy (adjuvant cohort) or neoadjuvant chemotherapy in patients who did not achieve pathological complete response (neoadjuvant cohort). This article presents the rational and design of this trial and the results of the pilot phase after 350 patients have been screened and provides insights that might provide information for future trials using the liquid biopsy approach as a tool towards precision medicine (NCT01548677).Entities:
Keywords: Adjuvant treatment; Breast cancer; CTC
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27289552 DOI: 10.1016/j.ejca.2016.04.024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Cancer ISSN: 0959-8049 Impact factor: 9.162