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New Hope For Patients With Less Common Breast Cancer

New Hope For Patients With Less Common Breast Cancer

NDTV02-06-2025
Virginia, United States:
A new treatment nearly halves the risk of disease progression or death from a less common form of breast cancer that hasn't seen major drug advances in over a decade, researchers reported Monday.
Results from the study, presented at the annual meeting of the American Society for Clinical Oncology, are expected to be submitted to regulators and could soon establish a new first-line therapy for people with HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer -- the advanced stage of a form that comprises 15-20 percent of all breast cancer cases.
HER2-positive cancers are fueled by an overactive HER2 gene, which makes too much of a protein called human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 that helps cancer cells grow and spread.
Patients with HER2-positive breast cancer that has spread to other parts of the body live around five years.
"Seeing such a striking improvement was really impressive to us -- we were taking a standard and almost doubling how long patients could have their cancer controlled for," oncologist Sara Tolaney, chief of the breast oncology division at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, told AFP.
The current standard of care, known as THP, combines chemotherapy with two antibodies that block growth signals from the HER2 protein. The new approach uses a drug called trastuzumab deruxtecan (T-DXd), an antibody attached to a chemotherapy drug.
'Smart Bomb'
This "smart bomb" strategy allows the drug to target cancer cells directly. "You can bind to the cancer cell and dump all that chemo right into the cancer cells," explained Ms Tolaney.
"Some people call them smart bombs because they're delivering chemo in a targeted fashion -- which is how I think we're able to really increase efficacy so much."
Common side effects included nausea, diarrhea and a low white blood cell count, with a less common effect involving lung scarring.
T-DXd is already approved as a "second-line" option -- used when first-line treatments stop working. But in the new trial, it was given earlier, paired with another antibody, pertuzumab.
In a global trial led by Ms Tolaney, just under 400 patients were randomly assigned to receive T-DXd in combination with pertuzumab, thought to enhance its effects.
A similar number received the standard THP regimen. A third group, who received T-DXd without pertuzumab, was also enrolled -- but those results haven't yet been reported.
44 Percent Risk Reduction
At a follow-up of 2.5 years, the T-DXd and pertuzumab combination reduced the risk of disease progression or death by 44 percent compared to standard care.
Fifteen percent of patients in the T-DXd group saw their cancer disappear entirely, compared to 8.5 percent in the THP group.
Because this was an interim analysis, the median progression-free survival -- meaning the point at which half the patients had seen their cancer return or worsen -- was 40.7 months with the new treatment, compared to 26.9 months with the standard, and could rise further as more data come in.
Ms Tolaney said the results would be submitted to regulators around the world, including the US Food and Drug Administration, and that future work would focus on optimizing how long patients remain on the treatment, particularly those showing complete remission.
"This represents a new first-line standard treatment option for HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer," said Dr. Rebecca Dent, a breast cancer specialist at the National Cancer Center Singapore who was not involved in the study
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'Writing Is Thinking': Do Students Who Use ChatGPT Learn Less?
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'Writing Is Thinking': Do Students Who Use ChatGPT Learn Less?

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Anil Menon will be next Indian-American to go to space. Who is he?
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Anil Menon will be next Indian-American to go to space. Who is he?

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Eggs en Provence: France's unique dinosaur egg trove
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time8 hours ago

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Eggs en Provence: France's unique dinosaur egg trove

At the foot of Sainte Victoire , the mountain in Provence immortalised by Impressionist painter Paul Cezanne, a palaeontologist brushes meticulously through a mound of red clay looking for fossils. These are not any old fossils, but 75-million-year-old dinosaur eggs . Little luck or skill is needed to find them: scientists believe that there are more dinosaur eggs here than at any other place on Earth. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Join new Free to Play WWII MMO War Thunder War Thunder Play Now Undo The area, closed to the public, is nicknamed " Eggs en Provence ", due to its proximity to the southeastern city of Aix en Provence. "There's no other place like it," explained Thierry Tortosa, a palaeontologist and conservationist at the Sainte Victoire Nature Reserve . Live Events "You only need to look down to find fragments. We're literally walking on eggshells here." Around 1,000 eggs, some of them as big as 30 centimetres (12 inches) in diameter, have been found here in recent years in an area measuring less than a hectare -- a mere dot on a reserve that will span 280 hectares once it is doubled in size by 2026 to prevent pillaging. "We reckon we've got about one egg per square metre (11 square feet). So there are thousands, possibly millions, here," Tortosa told AFP. "Eggs" is not in the business of competing with other archaeological sites -- even though Tortosa finds the "world record" of 17,000 dinosaur eggs discovered in Heyuan, China, in 1996 vaguely amusing. "We're not looking to dig them up because we're in a nature reserve and we can't just alter the landscape. We wait until they're uncovered by erosion," he said. "Besides, we don't have enough space to store them all. We just take those that are of interest from a palaeontology point of view." Holy Grail Despite the plethora of eggs on site, the scientists still have mysteries to solve. Those fossils found so far have all been empty, either because they were not fertilised or because the chick hatched and waddled off. "Until we find embryos inside -- that's the Holy Grail -- we won't know what kind of dinosaur laid them. All we know is that they were herbivores because they're round," said Tortosa. Fossilised dinosaur embryos are rarer than hen's teeth. Palaeontologists discovered a tiny fossilised Oviraptorosaur that was at least 66 million years old in Ganzhou, China, around the year 2000. But Tortosa remains optimistic that "Eggs" holds its own Baby Yingliang. "Never say never. In the nine years that I've been here, we've discovered a load of stuff we never thought we'd find." Which is why experts come once a year to search a new part of the reserve. The location is always kept secret to deter pillagers. When AFP visited, six scientists were crouched under camouflage netting in a valley lost in the Provencal scrub, scraping over a few square metres of clay-limestone earth, first with chisels, then with pointy-tipped scribers. "There's always something magical -- like being a child again -- when you find an egg or a fossilised bone," specialist Severine Berton told AFP. Unique Their "best" finds -- among the thousands they have dug up -- include a small femur and a 30-centimetre-long tibia-fibula. They are thought to come from a Rhabdodon or a Titanosaur -- huge herbivores who roamed the region. In the Cretaceous period (89-66 million years BCE), the Provencal countryside's then-flooded plains and silty-clayey soils offered ideal conditions for dinosaurs to graze and nest, and perfect conditions to conserve the eggs for millennia. The region, which stretched from what is now Spain to the Massif Central mountains of central France formed an island that was home to several dinosaur species found nowhere else in the world. Alongside the endemic herbivores were carnivores such as the Arcovenator and the Variraptor, a relative of the Velociraptor of Jurassic Park fame. In 1846, French palaeontologist Philippe Matheron found the world's first fossilised dinosaur egg in Rognac, around 30 kilometres from Eggs. Since then, museums from across the world have dispatched people to Provence on egg hunts. Everyone, it seems, wants a bit of the omelette. Despite efforts to stop pillaging, problems persist, such as when a wildfire uncovered a lot of fossils in 1989 and "everyone came egg collecting", Tortosa said. Five years later the site was designated a national geological nature reserve, closed to the public -- the highest level of protection available. The regional authorities are now mulling over ways to develop " palaeontology tourism ", a move Tortosa applauds. "France is the only country in the world that doesn't know how to promote its dinosaurs," Tortosa said. "Any other place would set up an entire museum just to show off a single tooth."

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