Research needs in breast cancer
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Date
2017
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Abstract
New research questions emerge as medical needs continue to evolve and as we improve our understanding of cancer biology and treatment of malignancies. Although significant advances have been made in some areas of breast cancer research resulting in improvements in therapies and outcomes over the last few decades, other areas have not benefited to the same degree and we continue to have many gaps in our knowledge. This article summarizes the 12 short and medium-term clinical research needs in breast cancer deemed as priorities in 2016 by a panel of experts, in an attempt to focus and accelerate future research in the most needed areas: (i) de-escalate breast cancer therapies in early breast cancer without sacrificing outcomes; (ii) explore optimal adjuvant treatment durations; (iii) develop better tools and strategies to identify patients with genetic predisposition; (iv) improve care in young patients with breast cancer; (v) develop tools to speed up drug development in biomarker-defined populations; (vi) identify and validate targets that mediate resistance to chemotherapy, endocrine therapy and anti-HER2 therapies; (vii) evaluate the efficacy of local-regional treatments for metastatic disease; (viii) better define the optimal sequence of treatments in the metastatic setting; (ix) evaluate the clinical impact of intra-patient heterogeneity (intratumor, inter-tumor and inter-lesion heterogeneity); (x) better understand the biology and identify new targets in triplenegative breast cancer; (xi) better understand immune surveillance in breast cancer and further develop immunotherapies; and (xii) increase survivorship research efforts including supportive care and quality of life. © The Author 2016.
Description
Keywords
Breast cancer, Clinical research, Medical needs, Antineoplastic agents, Biomarkers, tumor, Biomedical research, Breast neoplasms, Drug resistance, neoplasm, Female, Humans, Molecular targeted therapy, Quality improvement, Treatment outcome, Antineoplastic agent, Epidermal growth factor receptor antibody, Tumor marker, Article, Breast lesion, Cancer adjuvant therapy, Cancer chemotherapy, Cancer hormone therapy, Cancer immunotherapy, Cancer patient, Cancer research, Cancer resistance, Cancer susceptibility, Clinical outcome, Drug efficacy, Drug research, Genetic predisposition, Health care need, Human, Immunosurveillance, Medical expert, Metastatic breast cancer, Patient care, Priority journal, Professional knowledge, Quality of life, Research priority, Treatment duration, Triple negative breast cancer, Validation study, Breast tumor, Drug resistance, Medical research, Metabolism, Molecularly targeted therapy, Total quality management