According to a study, women with the most common and least aggressive subtype of breast cancer were still at risk of death from the disease more than 10 years after diagnosis.
According to a study, women with the most common and least aggressive subtype of breast cancer were still at risk of death from the disease more than 10 years after diagnosis. The Kaiser Permanente study is published in the journal Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention. The 21-year study included nearly 1,000 women from Kaiser Permanente Southern California and found that molecular subtypes of breast cancer were important independent predictors of breast cancer mortality. In particular, women with luminal A tumors — a subtype of breast cancer that is generally thought to have the best prognosis — were still at risk for death from the cancer more than 10 years after diagnosis.
Researchers also found that women with HER2-enriched and luminal B tumors had roughly a two-fold increased risk of death from breast cancer compared to women who are diagnosed with luminal A tumors, a finding that is consistent with previous studies.
"The findings of this study indicate that it is important to consider breast cancer molecular subtypes in determining the optimal treatment for women with breast cancer," said study lead author Reina Haque, PhD, MPH, from Kaiser Permanente Southern California's Department of Research & Evaluation. "Women with luminal A tumors — the least aggressive but most common cancerous breast tumor — could benefit from extended treatment to improve their chances for long-term survival."
Breast cancer tumors are often divided into four molecular subtypes:
- luminal A, which tends to have the best prognosis with fairly high survival rates;
- luminal B, which typically occurs in younger women and has a poor prognosis;
- the basal-like subtype, which also tends to occur in younger women, as well as African American women, and has a poor prognosis;
- and the HER2-enriched subtype, which has a fairly poor prognosis and is prone to early and frequent recurrence and metastases.
Of the four subtypes, luminal A is the most common and is responsible for 42 to 59 percent of all breast cancer cases.
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"These and earlier findings strongly support molecular subtypes as important independent predictors of breast cancer mortality," said Haque. "It is important for women with breast cancer, even those diagnosed with the least aggressive form of the disease, to be an advocate for their own health and speak to their doctors about treatment options."
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Source-Eurekalert