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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Locally advanced breast cancer poses significant challenges to the
multidisciplinary team, in particular with hormone receptor (HR) positive, HER2-
negative tumors that classically yield lower pathological complete responses with
chemotherapy. The increasingly significant use of CDK 4/6 inhibitors (CDK4/6i)
plus endocrine therapy (ET) in different breast cancer settings has led to clinical
trials focusing on this strategy as a primary treatment, with promising results. The
impact of the microbiota on cancer, and vice-versa, is an emerging topic in
oncology. The authors report a clinical case of a postmenopausal female patient
with an invasive breast carcinoma of the right breast, Luminal B-like, staged as
cT4cN3M0 (IIIB). Since the lesion was considered primarily inoperable, the patient
started letrozole and ribociclib. Following 6 months of systemic therapy, the
clinical response was significant, and surgery with curative intent was performed.
The final staging was ypT3ypN2aM0, R1, and the patient started adjuvant letrozole
and radiotherapy. This case provides important insights on primary CDK4/6i plus
ET in locally advanced unresectable HR+/HER2- breast cancer and its potential
implications in disease management further ahead. The patient’s gut microbiota
was analyzed throughout the disease course and therapeutic approach,
evidencing a shift in gut microbial dominance from Firmicutes to Bacteroidetes and a loss of microbial diversity following 6 months of systemic therapy. The
analysis of the intratumoral microbiota from the surgical specimen revealed high
microbial dissimilarity between the residual tumor and respective margins.
Description
Keywords
Neoplasias da Mama Quinase 4 Dependente de Ciclina Microbiota Breast Neoplasms Cyclin-Dependent Kinase 4
Citation
Front. Oncol. 14:1360737.