Triple negative breast cancer is the most aggressive kind of breast cancer with high risk of recurrences and poor outcomes. Systemic chemotherapy has significantly improved long term outcomes in early stage patients; however, metastatic recurrences still develop in a significant number of patients. Anthracycline and taxane based chemotherapy regimens are standard of care for early stage patients. Neoadjuvant treatment is preferred due to the ability to assess pathologic responses providing important prognostic information and guidance in adjuvant therapy decisions. Carboplatin addition to the anthracycline and taxane backbone is associated with a significant improvement in pathologic complete response but is associated with more toxicity. Understanding the immune microenvironment of triple negative disease is an exciting field and immune checkpoint inhibitors have shown great promise in further improving response rates in early stage patients. Patients with residual disease after neoadjuvant chemotherapy have a significantly higher risk of recurrence compared to those with complete responses. Adjuvant capecitabine for these high-risk patients have shown significant improvement in long term outcomes and is routinely used in this setting. Given the heterogeneity within triple negative tumors, molecular subtypes with variable genomic makeup and chemo sensitivities have been identified and will likely aid in further clinical developmental therapeutics.
Keywords: Complete pathologic response; Neoadjuvant chemotherapy; Systemic chemotherapy; Triple negative breast cancer.
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