BREAST CANCER SUFFERERS COULD AVOID CHEMOTHERAPY THROUGH TUMOUR PROFILING

More people with breast cancer could be spared chemotherapy after a health watchdog recommended the wider use of tumour profiling tests.

The tests, which provide information on the genetic makeup of breast cancer tumours, can help doctors and patients decide whether chemotherapy is needed to prevent cancer coming back.

The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) has now backed the wider use of three tumour profiling tests (EndoPredict, Prosigna, and Oncotype DX) by the NHS.

The test results, which are returned in days, are taken in combination with other factors such as tumour size to help to predict the risk of cancer returning after surgery.

Tests give patients treatment options

If the tumour profiling test results suggest a low risk of cancer recurrence, patients may opt not to have chemotherapy, which can have harsh side-effects.

Mark Chapman, the interim director of the health technologies programme at Nice, said: “Choosing whether to have chemotherapy is a tough decision to make when you don’t have all the information available to you.

“A test that can help to predict the risk of breast cancer spreading should be considered as a significant step forward for patients.

“Our committee heard compelling patient testimony which outlined the significant emotional and psychological strain of having to make this decision.

“Having chemotherapy will be the right choice for some, but for others they will not have to face the side-effects which come with the treatment.”

Tumour profiling tests are already recommended for guiding chemotherapy decisions in people with oestrogen receptor ER-positive, HER2-negative, lymph-node negative early breast cancer.

Thousands more could benefit from expanded tests

But figures suggest an extra 3,000 patients or more could benefit from an expansion in testing.

These are men, and  women who have been through the menopause, with oestrogen receptor (ER) or progesterone receptor (PR)-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-negative early breast cancer with one to three positive lymph nodes.

Professor Simon Holt, from Swansea University and Prince Philip Hospital in Wales, said the use of Oncotype DX in particular “will reduce suffering and inconvenience” by sparing up to 85 per cent of eligible people unnecessary chemotherapy.

“It also reduces significantly the cost of treatment so that NHS resources can be redistributed to other medical priorities,” he said, adding that using the test gave clinicians and their patients “much greater confidence in their chemotherapy decisions”.

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2024-05-09T20:29:14Z dg43tfdfdgfd