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Howard "Skip" A. Burris, III, MD, chief medical officer, Sarah Cannon Research Institute, 2019 ASCO president-elect, and a 2014 Giant of Cancer Care® in Drug Development, discusses the impact of molecular profiling in breast cancer.
Howard "Skip" A. Burris, III, MD, chief medical officer, Sarah Cannon Research Institute, 2019 ASCO president-elect, and a 2014 Giant of Cancer Care® in Drug Development, discusses the impact of molecular profiling in breast cancer.
Determining the role of next-generation sequencing (NGS) and molecular profiling in the management of patients with breast cancer in practice is of great debate. Burris says that he surveyed community oncologists at Sarah Cannon Research Institute and the resounding response was that they would want to better understand the molecular profile of a resistant tumor. With that being said, how to handle the data associated with this is a challenge, Burris notes.
For patients with relapsed or recurrent breast cancer, NGS should be part of the standard treatment decision-making process, says Burris; this not only increases the chances that these patients could get enrolled in a relevant clinical trial, but it also necessary for the field as a whole. The more patients with resistant and recurrent disease who undergo molecular profiling, the better physicians will be able to understand where to utilize certain drugs.
For example, researchers are seeing increasing evidence to suggest that high tumor mutational burden and microsatellite instability-high may be associated with higher chance of response to checkpoint inhibitors. While this needs to be confirmed in clinical trials, NGS can at least identify these patients and point them toward the right trial for them.
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