Dose-dense chemotherapy for breast cancer: what does the future hold?
Review
Overview
abstract
Within the last several decades adjuvant polychemotherapy for breast cancer has evolved with the development of anthracyclines and taxanes. Parallel to these developments, granulocyte-colony stimulating factor support has permitted the safe delivery of chemotherapy at shorter ('dose-dense') intertreatment intervals, which, as predicted by preclinical models, has further improved survival. Recently, insights into tumor biology have led the development of targeted therapies, such as trastuzumab for HER2-positive disease, and this has now been successfully incorporated into dose-dense therapy. Newer targeted agents may be similarly incorporated into dose-dense regimens to further improve patient outcomes. This article reviews dose-dense therapy and discusses its role as a chemotherapy foundation for additional targeted agents.