Premenopausal breast cancer patients like Pate, who never took combined hormone therapy, feel the lobular code is far from cracked. Researchers, too, believe there’s much more to be done.
“There are still a number of important unanswered questions about lobular breast cancer,” said Li. “We have some understanding of its unique biology but incomplete knowledge of why it is more likely to recur to bones and ovaries than other forms of breast cancer. We also need better ways to screen for lobular cancer since we know that mammography more often misses lobular tumors than other forms of breast cancer.”
What’s new in ILC research?
While there are challenges to lobular research — it’s a less common cancer so there are fewer sample sizes and cell lines — studies now underway may lead to answers about the cancer’s origins, changes to current treatment and potential therapies.
In September 2015, results from the Breast International Group 1-98 study presented key findings regarding the hormonal treatment of ILC patients: An aromatase inhibitor (in this case, letrozole) worked better for ILC patients than tamoxifen. As a result, a new national study, run through the Translational Breast Cancer Research Consortium and led by U Pitt lobular expert Dr. Rachel Jankowitz (Linden is leading it locally), is comparing three endocrine therapies — fulvestrant, tamoxifen and the AI anastrozole — to see which one works best.
“The hypothesis of this trial,” said Davidson, who helped create the TBCRC back in 2005, “is that tamoxifen will be the least effective drug and that the AI and fulvestrant might actually be better drugs in this setting. It may lead us to think more carefully about how we treat these women in the future.”
There is also a body of work looking at potential molecular targets for ILC.
In 2015, The Cancer Genome Atlas published a paper outlining a few more of ILC’s “genetic hallmarks,” aside from the E-cadherin loss. A follow-up study by U Pitt lobular expert Dr. Steffi Oesterreich (and Davidson) identified a signaling molecule that might also serve as a target. Davidson, Oesterreich, Porter and Li are delving further into ILC’s genetic profiles using population data from Fred Hutch’s Cancer Surveillance System, a western Washington cancer registry. Breaking patient data into six comparison groups, they’re studying how the hormone receptors in both ductal and lobular patients’ tumors are influenced by synthetic progestin and estrogen (CHT), by estrogen therapy alone and by no combined hormone therapy whatsoever.
“We’re testing these samples comprehensively for expression differences and associations with hormonal replacement therapies [HRT],” said Porter. “If we look at the gene expression and mutations and relate them to HRT categories, we might start to see differences that could lead to the identification of novel prevention and therapeutic targets.”