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Herceptin Still Improves Odds Against Breast Cancer


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This paper was an analysis of two trials that had already shown a benefit with Herceptin. Participants in both trials underwent chemotherapy and were then randomized to receive Herceptin or a placebo.

After four years, 85.9 percent of the women in the Herceptin arm remain cancer-free and 92.6 percent are still alive, compared with 73.1 percent and 89.4 percent respectively, of those not treated with Herceptin.

Overall, 397 patients in the chemotherapy-alone group have developed a recurrence or died, compared to only 222 in the Herceptin group.

Text Continues Below



The addition of Herceptin to therapy decreased the chances of the cancer returning by 52 percent and the risk of death by 35 percent.

"The benefit is not short-term, it's long-lasting, which impacts many, many lives," Perez said.

The first joint analysis of these two trials appeared in the Oct. 20., 2005, issue of the New England Journal of Medicine and found that disease-free survival and overall survival were improved by 52 percent and 33 percent, respectively, after two years of follow-up.

The good news follows another longer-term study of the drug, released Sunday at the cancer meeting, which showed that the risk of heart failure in women taking Herceptin was not any higher at five years than it was at two years.

Among the other findings of the joint analysis: the highest risk of relapse for HER2-positive breast cancer occurs within the first two years, although additional recurrences occur later and the cancer is more likely to recur in patients who initially had larger tumors, who had lymph node involvement or whose tumors were also estrogen-receptor-negative.

"The peak of relapse is still within the first three years, but relapses still continue occurring," Perez said.

Interestingly, Perez also found that estrogen-receptor-positive tumors experienced a 15 percent improvement, even though many physicians had believed these tumors did not respond well to Herceptin.

"That's going to be news to a lot of people," Perez said.

More information

The National Cancer Institute has more on Herceptin.

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Copyright © 2007 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
Last updated 6/4/2007

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SOURCES: Edith Perez, M.D., director, Mayo Clinic's Multidisciplinary Breast Clinic, Jacksonville, Fla.; Len Lichtenfeld, M.D., deputy chief medical officer, American Cancer Society, Atlanta; Ramona Swaby, M.D., medical oncologist specializing in breast cancer, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia; June 4, 2007, presentation, American Society of Clinical Oncology


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