Landmark shift: pre-surgery chemotherapy for operable breast cancer
Wendy Wilson, 56,
had started making healthier choices, but in May 2010 she was diagnosed with
breast cancer.
Wendy met with Dr.
Jean-François Boileau who leads the Neoadjuvant
Locally Advanced Breast Cancer Clinic at Sunnybrook's Odette Cancer Centre. She received prompt care
and was on her way to contributing to research that may mean a landmark shift in
the treatment approach for many women newly diagnosed.
Dr. Boileau, a
surgical oncologist with the Odette Breast Cancer Care team, is leading
two Canadian clinical trials on chemotherapy before surgery (neoadjuvant chemotherapy)
and collaborating with medical oncologists and radiation oncologists such as
Dr. Sonal Gandhi and Dr. Jacqueline Spayne. The Odette Centre is one of only
two centres in Canada chosen to participate in this large multi-centre clinical
trial across North America hosted by the NSABP (National
Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project).
Usually, neoadjuvant
chemotherapy is recommended to patients with locally advanced or inoperable
breast cancer, to reduce tumour size so more of the breast can be saved during
surgery. Increasingly, neoadjuvant
chemotherapy is being offered to patients with more operable breast
cancer. Wendy is one of over 500
participants in Phase III trials for women with operable breast cancer.
"Neoadjuvant therapy is a good
example of personalized care," says Dr. Boileau. "For an increasing number of
patients, it is difficult to identify residual cancer cells at the time of
surgery. With neoadjuvant chemotherapy, the response to the treatment is known
up front by monitoring response to chemotherapy in the tumour itself. If the
response is not optimal, treatment can be changed, or the patient may be a
candidate for novel therapies in other clinical trials."
Neoadjuvant
chemotherapy has strong potential to better target cancer cells, lower the risk
of recurrence and better measure response to therapy for women also diagnosed
with high-risk breast cancer subgroups like HER-2 positive (tests positive for HER
2 (human epidermal growth factor receptor 2) which is treatable with therapies
such as Herceptin) or 'triple negative' (defined as negative for
the three standard markers including estrogen receptor, HER2 and progesterone
receptor).
"These types of more
aggressive breast cancers are also responding well to neoadjuvant chemotherapy," says Dr. Boileau, who did his surgical oncology fellowship at the University
of Toronto.
"When I first heard the words 'you have cancer', I felt like my life was
completely upside-down," says Wendy. "Then I made up my mind: there's
no way I'm giving in. I still have
things I need to do." She credits Dr. Boileau and his team for being a lifeline of
sorts. Earlier this year, her daughter Melissa and son-in-law Sunny welcomed their
third child into the family - another grandson for Wendy, who
loves spending time with all of her grandchildren.