Skip over navigation
The Hospital
Research
Support Us
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute
Home
Français
Directions & Maps
Contact Us
About Us
Vision and Strategic Directions
Board Chair and CEO Message
Leadership Team
Annual Reports
Facilities
Research Data Management
Equity, Diversity and Inclusion
Wellness
Our Research
Priorities, Programs and Diseases
Researcher Profiles
National Research Networks
Scientific Publications
Research Awards
Technology Transfer
Industry Sponsored Research
Responsible Innovation
For Students & Fellows
News & Events
Newsroom
Seminars & Events
Career Opportunities
For Patients
News & Events
Home
>
News & Events
>
Newsroom
Bookmark or Share
Display Options
Display Options
+
Increase
/
-
Decrease
font size
High contrast version
Printer-friendly version
Newsroom
Seminars & Events
Newsroom
New research shows that second biopsy should be considered for some breast cancer patients
November 28, 2011
Breast cancer therapy has become highly personalized over the last decade, with treatment decisions now routinely based on the presence or absence of certain biomarkers in biopsied tumour samples. A new study led by Dr. Mark Clemons and Dr. Eitan Amir takes this a step further, by showing that breast cancer metastases often express different biomarkers than primary breast tumours, and knowledge of this difference can open up new and more effective treatment options for some women.
The study, which is published in the
Journal of Clinical Oncology
, involved 121 women with progressive or recurrent metastatic breast cancer. Metastases were biopsied and examined for the expression of three biomarker receptors (for estrogen, progesterone and Her2) and the results were compared with biopsies from the original breast tumours. Approximately 38 per cent of women had a change in at least one biomarker in their metastases compared to their original tumours, and this led to a change in treatment strategy in 14 per cent of the women (one in seven).
“This study represents a major advance in the development of more personalized therapies for breast cancer,” said Dr. Mark Clemons, a breast cancer specialist at The Ottawa Hospital, clinical investigator at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute and associate professor of medicine at the University of Ottawa. “By examining the molecular characteristics of tumours and metastases, we are now increasingly able to provide tailored therapies that are more likely to work and less likely to have side effects for individual women. Further research is needed though, because there are still far too many women who ultimately die of breast cancer, and cancer overall is now the number one killer in Canada.”
This research was conducted in partnership with investigators at the University Health Network’s Princess Margaret Hospital. It was funded by the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation. Dr. Clemons and other cancer researchers at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute are also supported by The Ottawa Hospital Foundation.