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ACTIVE is a prospective, single-arm, phase I/IIa study examining an active surveillance strategy for small, screen-detected, luminal breast cancer. Patients aged 70 or older with clinical stage I ER+/HER2- breast cancer are eligible. The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if an active surveillance strategy (serial imaging rather than therapeutic intervention) is a safe approach to monitor small breast cancers. The main question to answer is the proportion of participants who experience tumor progression by 12 months.
Full description
Breast cancer, like most cancers arising in adults, is a disease of aging. Age is one of the most important risk factors, with nearly one third of all breast cancer cases diagnosed in patients older than 70 years and a peak incidence occurring in the 60s to 70s. The vast majority of these cancers are estrogen receptor positive (ER+), and the proportion of ER+ tumors relative to other subtypes increases with age. Consistent with the favorable receptor status (high degree of ER expression with negative HER2 receptor), these tumors grow slowly and are often less aggressive than tumors in younger patients, reflecting that tumorigenesis in these patients may largely be due to chronic exposures to tumor-promoting stimuli.
A sizable proportion of older women - defined as those aged 70 years or older - continue screening mammography. Continuation of routine mammography in older patients can lead to overdiagnosis, which is the detection of cancers that would never have caused symptoms or affected lifespan. As breast cancer incidence rises with age but competing risks of death (like heart disease or other illnesses) also increase, many slow-growing tumors identified through screening may not require treatment. However, once diagnosed, these cancers often lead to unnecessary interventions such as surgery, radiation, or endocrine therapy, which carry physical and emotional burdens. Overdiagnosis can also create anxiety, reduce quality of life, and strain healthcare resources, especially when the benefits of early detection decline with age. Overdiagnosis typically encompasses multiple clinical scenarios: first, some tumors are biologically indolent, due to their genomics, tumor microenvironment, and systemic macroenvironment, and not preordained to grow, spread, or kill; second, some small tumors may have the biological potential to grow and spread but will not do so in the patient's lifetime.
The overall hypothesis of the ACTIVE trial is that management of small, screen-detected, ER+/HER2- tumors using an active surveillance is safe and feasible.
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Inclusion criteria
Women aged 70 years or older with a diagnosis of invasive breast cancer who have not undergone surgical resection of the primary invasive tumor and/or axillary lymph nodes, have not undertaken any systemic therapy, and have not received radiation therapy as a treatment for this diagnosis. Patients with invasive cancer that is identified after excisional biopsy for atypia are included.
Tumors must have been identified through mammographic screening.
Tumor is less than or equal to 2cm (T1a through T1c) in maximum dimension based on diagnostic ultrasound, or if not visible on ultrasound, then on mammogram. Must have clinically and radiographically node negative disease. Inclusion criteria for different tumor sizes is as follows:
Breast cancer must be ER positive and HER2 negative according to the definition below, as assessed by local pathology.
Patients with cognitive impairment are eligible provided that a legal surrogate is able to sign informed consent for study participation.
Archival tissue will be submitted for all participants. Tissue must be confirmed available prior to registration.
Exclusion criteria
50 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Neil Carleton, MD, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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