Breast cancer is a heterogenous disease with significant variations in biologic potential, ranging from small, low-grade, DCIS discovered mammographically with essentially no impact on patient survival to rapidly growing, palpable, locally advanced invasive breast cancer with clinically palpable nodal metastasis. The current challenge is to identify the clinical, pathologic, and molecular factors that determine the biologic potential of a particular breast cancer. Although size, nodal status, histologic grade, age, surgical margin, and hormone receptor status of breast cancer are the most important prognostic factors, the focus of research must be beyond these factors to other nonspecific prognostic information. Bone marrow micrometastasis may be an important factor to help predict outcome (7a) and the complement of sentinel node biopsy, bone marrow analysis, and primary tumor features may allow physicians to better select therapy. With increased understanding of the individual molecular events that control the invasive potential of a particular cancer, practitioners should be better able to predict more accurately which patients have little risk of recurrent disease or metastasis and would be best served by surgery alone versus patients who have a high risk of recurrent and metastatic disease and who should receive multimodality care.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0889-8545(03)00060-3 | DOI Listing |
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