Conference Coverage

VIDEO: Resistance to endocrine therapy a moving target


 

AT MBCC

– Hormonal ablation is a mainstay of therapy for women with hormone receptor–positive breast cancer. A significant proportion of patients, however, are either initially refractory to hormonal therapy or acquire resistance to it over time.

The difficulty for patients with breast cancer and for the physicians who treat them is that there are no simple answers to the question of which patients can continue to benefit from endocrine monotherapy. Are there adequate biomarkers for optimal follow-on therapy when a patient experiences disease progression, and what is the optimal sequence of targeted therapy with endocrine inhibitors, disrupters, or other agents?

In a video interview at the annual Miami Breast Cancer Conference, held by Physicians’ Education Resource, William J. Gradishar, MD, of Northwestern University, Chicago, discusses strategies for combating resistance to endocrine ablative therapy, and describes how new therapies and new treatment strategies are being incorporated into National Comprehensive Cancer Network breast cancer guidelines.

Dr. Gradishar reported having no clinical disclosures.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

Recommended Reading

Optimal adjuvant endocrine therapy use in breast cancer remains elusive
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Are Breast Cancer Patients Satisfied With Their Care?
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Lipid-lowering meds benefit some breast cancer patients
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Scalp cooling reduces hair loss in 50% or more of women in separate studies
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Oral contraceptive use confers long-term cancer protection
Breast Cancer ICYMI
‘Strong evidence’ links obesity to cancers
Breast Cancer ICYMI
More than one-third of tumors found on breast cancer screening represent overdiagnosis
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Breast cancer mortality mapped for 2017
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Miami Breast Cancer Symposium to explore treatment controversies
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Posttreatment survivorship care needs of Spanish-speaking Latinas with breast cancer
Breast Cancer ICYMI