Dose-dense adjuvant chemotherapy can improve survival for patients with high-risk breast cancer, according to a team of researchers that includes the Karolinska Institutet. The international PANTHER trial, which studied more than 2,000 patients where 97% had metastasis to the lymph nodes in the armpit, compared two different chemotherapy regimens and found that the dose-intensive treatment reduced the risk of recurrence and spread of the disease. The results are presented in the Journal of Clinical Oncology .

Adjuvant chemotherapy is a type of treatment given after primary treatment, usually surgery, to reduce the risk of cancer recurrence. By administering chemotherapy after surgery, the growth of metastases can be delayed or prevented, which can improve a patient's chances of survival. Chemotherapy every two weeks (dose-dense treatment) after surgery for high-risk breast cancer has been shown to be more effective than the same treatment every three weeks.

However, previously published studies used paclitaxel every three weeks as a control treatment. This type of treatment is no longer considered appropriate, and therefore the researchers wanted to compare dose-dense treatment with the current optimal treatment. "Our study shows for the first time that dose-dense chemotherapy leads to better survival compared to optimal chemotherapy with anthracycline and docetaxel every three weeks," says Alexios Matikas, Associate Professor at the Department of Oncology-Pathology and the s.