AI Article Synopsis

  • Minimally invasive locoregional therapies are increasingly important in treating both primary and metastatic breast cancer, driven by factors like earlier diagnosis and improved patient survival.
  • Cryoablation is becoming the preferred method for primary breast cancer due to its benefits such as no need for sedation and the ability to monitor the procedure.
  • There’s promising evidence that locoregional therapies may improve survival for patients with oligometastatic breast cancer, but further studies are essential to determine the best treatment approaches and integrate these interventions into standard clinical practice.

Article Abstract

Minimally invasive locoregional therapies have a growing role in the multidisciplinary treatment of primary and metastatic breast cancer. Factors contributing to the expanding role of ablation for primary breast cancer include earlier diagnosis, when tumors are small, and increased longevity of patients whose condition precludes surgery. Cryoablation has emerged as the leading ablative modality for primary breast cancer owing to its wide availability, the lack of need for sedation, and the ability to monitor the ablation zone. Emerging evidence suggests that in patients with oligometastatic breast cancer, use of locoregional therapies to eradicate all disease sites may confer a survival advantage. Evidence also suggests that transarterial therapies-including chemoembolization, chemoperfusion, and radioembolization-may be helpful to some patients with advanced liver metastases from breast cancer, such as those with hepatic oligoprogression or those who cannot tolerate systemic therapy. However, the optimal modalities for treatment of oligometastatic and advanced metastatic disease remain unknown. Finally, locoregional therapies may produce tumor antigens that in combination with immunotherapy drive anti-tumor immunity. Although key trials are ongoing, additional prospective studies are needed to establish the inclusion of interventional oncology in societal breast cancer guidelines to support further clinical adoption and improved patient outcomes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2214/AJR.23.29454DOI Listing

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