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Ductal carcinoma in situ of the breast: finding the balance between overtreatment and undertreatment.

Suzette Delaloge ,
Seema Ahsan Khan ,
Jelle Wesseling ,
Timothy Whelan

Abstract

Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) accounts for 15-25% of all breast cancer diagnoses. Its prognosis is excellent overall, the main risk being the occurrence of local breast events, as most cases of DCIS do not progress to invasive cancer. Systematic screening has greatly increased the incidence of this non-obligate precursor of invasion, lending urgency to the need to identify DCIS that is prone to invasive progression and distinguish it from non-invasion-prone DCIS, as the latter can be overdiagnosed and therefore overtreated. Treatment strategies, including surgery, radiotherapy, and optional endocrine therapy, decrease the risk of local events, but have no effect on survival outcomes. Active surveillance is being evaluated as a possible new option for low-risk DCIS. Considerable efforts to decipher the biology of DCIS have led to a better understanding of the factors that determine its variable natural history. Given this variability, shared decision making regarding optimal, personalised treatment strategies is the most appropriate course of action. Well designed, risk-based de-escalation studies remain a major need in this field.

More about this publication

Lancet (London, England)

Volume 403
Issue nr. 10445
Pages 2734-2746
Publication date 22-06-2024

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1016/S0140-6736(24)00425-2
Europe PubMed Central 38735296
Pubmed 38735296

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