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Electrochemotherapy (ECT) has been proposed as a new therapeutic option for palliating cutaneous metastases from breast carcinoma.
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Electrochemotherapy
Recently, electrochemotherapy (ECT) has been proposed as a new therapeutic option for palliating cutaneous metastases from breast carcinoma. Over the last decade, ECT has represented an innovative and effective local/regional therapy in the field of dermato-oncology. In brief, it consists of combining chemotherapy with the local application (at the tumor site) of electric pulses. Through the application of short and intense electric pulses, a physical phenomenon (reversible electroporation) occurs, consisting of the temporary opening of pores through the cell membrane, increasing its permeability. This mechanism allows for the diffusion of poorly permeable drugs into the cytoplasm. Once the transmembrane pores close, after a few milliseconds, the final effect is the concentration of the chemotherapeutic drug inside the cell and an increase in its cytotoxic effect. The enhancement of cytotoxic action ranges from 80 (in the case of cisplatin) to 8000 times (in the case of bleomycin).
Clinical experience with electrochemotherapy
The initial clinical experiences in treating patients with cutaneous metastases using ECT demonstrated very promising results in tumors of various histotypes. After the standardization of the method, studies published over the last decade provide extensive evidence that ECT has high antitumor activity. The most extensive experience has been primarily gathered in patients with superficial metastases from melanoma and breast carcinoma and has also been the subject of a meta-analysis comparing different "skin-directed" therapies.
In current clinical practice, ECT is employed as a complementary or alternative treatment in the management of tumors and cutaneous metastases that are not surgically resectable or not amenable to treatment with radiotherapy or systemic oncologic therapies. Thanks to its relative ease of application and low toxicity profile, ECT represents an effective tool for palliating symptomatic superficial metastases (bleeding, ulcerated, painful), ensuring preservation of the patient's quality of life regarding aspects related to the presence of the disease at the cutaneous level.
The main advantages of treatment with ECT are represented by the following factors:
The use of the method has progressively increased, especially in Europe, following the publication of European Standard Operative Procedures of Electrochemotherapy (ESOPE) in 2006. These guidelines served as the basis for conducting a multicenter European study (ESOPE Study) that demonstrated the feasibility of the indicated operative modalities and the safety of the procedure.
Clinical experience with electrochemotherapy in breast carcinoma
Clinical experiences in subsequent years have been summarized in two recent meta-analyses, mainly based on studies in patients with melanoma and breast carcinoma, where ECT demonstrated a complete response rate of 59% and 57.5%, respectively. A phase 2 study conducted at the Veneto Oncology Institute in Padua on 34 patients with recurrent cutaneous lesions on the thoracic wall reported an overall response rate of 87%, with 40% of patients achieving a complete and lasting response on the treated lesions. Comparable results have been obtained in other smaller experiences reported in the literature.
More recently, a multicenter retrospective study was published by the Italian Senological Group for Electrochemotherapy (GISEL) based on 125 patients with cutaneous metastases from breast carcinoma. According to the data from this study, the response rate to ECT was 90%, with 58% of patients reporting a complete response. In this study, tumor size (<3cm), presence of hormonal receptors, low proliferative index (Ki-67), absence of tumor ulceration, and absence of visceral metastases were predictive factors for a complete response to treatment. Based on this data and subdividing patients into intrinsic subtypes indicated by the St. Gallen classification, patients with "luminal A-like" type tumors reported a significantly higher complete response rate than all others (73.9% vs 54.7%, P=0.02).
If these preliminary observations were confirmed by a prospective study on a larger case series, it could improve the criteria for selecting patients with breast carcinoma eligible for ECT treatment.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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