MammaPrint 70-Gene breast cancer recurrence assay (Agendia)
HAYES, Inc.
            Record ID 32016000951
            English
                                                            
                Authors' recommendations:
                Breast cancer is the most common cancer affecting women, with approximately 200,000 newly identified cases every year in the United States. If identified while localized, treatment of breast cancer has a 98.6% 5-year survival rate; however, this drops to 84.4% once the cancer has spread to the lymph nodes (node positive, or N ), and drops further to 24.3% if the cancer has metastasized. Adjuvant chemotherapy is used in the treatment of many patients with a high risk of breast cancer recurrence to reduce the risk of recurrence following surgical resection. Physicians and patients must balance the benefits of adjuvant chemotherapy and antiestrogen therapy in terms of reducing the risk of cancer recurrence with the risk of toxicities associated with the use of these agents. Common toxicities of breast cancer chemotherapies are nausea and vomiting,
myelosuppression, hair loss, mucositis, and cognitive decline. Less common adverse effects include heart failure, thromboembolic events, premature menopause, and leukemia. Given the need to balance the benefits and harms of adjuvant chemotherapy, it is generally offered on the basis of risk factors that have been shown to be associated with greater disease-specific mortality or greater chance of distant recurrence (metastasis), such as patient age, menopause status, disease stage and location, histologic and nuclear tumor grade, hormone receptor status (estrogen receptor [ER], progesterone receptor [PR], and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 [HER2]), and measures of proliferation of the tumor. Several guidelines and prognostic models have been developed to aid physicians and patients in making these complex decisions. Three of the most common guidelines are the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines, the St. Gallen guidelines, and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Consensus Conference Statement (2000) guidelines.
Recently, several molecular assays have also been developed to provide prognostic information on which patients may benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy. The MammaPrint assay is one such test.
            
                                    
            Details
                        
                Project Status:
                Completed
            
                                                            
                Year Published:
                2016
            
                                    
                URL for published report:
                The report may be purchased from: http://www.hayesinc.com/hayes/crd/?crd=12490
            
                                                            
                English language abstract:
                An English language summary is available
            
                                    
                Publication Type:
                Not Assigned
            
                                    
                Country:
                United States
            
                                                
                        MeSH Terms
            - Humans
- Breast Neoplasms
- Chemotherapy, Adjuvant
- Estrogen Receptor Modulators
- Receptors, Estrogen
- Receptors, Progesterone
Contact
                        
                Organisation Name:
                HAYES, Inc.
            
            
                        
                Contact Address:
                157 S. Broad Street, Suite 200, Lansdale, PA 19446, USA. Tel: 215 855 0615; Fax: 215 855 5218
            
                                    
                Contact Name:
                saleinfo@hayesinc.com
            
                                    
                Contact Email:
                saleinfo@hayesinc.com
            
                                    
                Copyright:
                2014 Winifred S. Hayes, Inc
            
                    
                This is a bibliographic record of a published health technology assessment from a member of INAHTA or other HTA producer. No evaluation of the quality of this assessment has been made for the HTA database.