
Why Breast Cancer Care Isn't One Size Fits All
CURE spoke with Dr. Kathie-Ann Joseph about the importance of personalized, multidisciplinary treatments when caring for patients with breast cancer.
CURE spoke with Dr. Kathie-Ann Joseph about the importance of personalized, multidisciplinary treatments when caring for patients with breast cancer.
Joseph was recently appointed by RWJBarnabas Health and Rutgers Cancer Institute to be the chief of breast surgery and co-director of the multidisciplinary breast program at Rutgers Cancer Institute and the Jack and Sheryl Morris Cancer Center. She will also serve as associate chief surgical officer for system integration and quality, RWJBarnabas Health, as well as director of breast surgical services for the RWJBarnabas Health southern region.
Transcript
What is some current research or clinical trials that patients should have on their radar?
I think some of the options that they should think about is the fact that we have more options now for women with early-stage breast cancer, women who are who are estrogen receptor-positive, there's just more options in terms of CDK4 inhibitors, particular for those women who are estrogen receptor-positive and lymph node-positive.
It's not always a done deal that you have to have chemotherapy. We're not just looking at the size of the tumor and the whether or not they have lymph nodes. But we're looking more at the biology of the tumor. It's not one size fits all. And so, I think what's important that patients understand is they come in and they're worried about, “I know someone else who had this type of treatment.” No, we don't do that. We look at you as the individual. We're looking at your own tumor biology and your own what we call genomics, to determine the type of treatment that you should receive. And we will run assays on your specific tumor, we send it to pathology, and we send it out, and we look at it to determine what your what your treatment should be.
And so, you can have the same sort of profile as someone else, but you may get a different treatment. I think that's something that's very important, and I try to remind patients not to compare yourself to someone else now, because you can have a completely different treatment plan, and what's really nice about the way we go about it is we work as a team. This is multidisciplinary care. So, your plan is going to be discussed not just with the surgeon, but with the medical oncologist, with the radiation oncologist, so that we come up with a comprehensive plan. Everybody's on the same page.
Transcript has been edited for clarity and conciseness.
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