I have an elderly aunt who was diagnosed with breast cancer many years ago. She was treated and remained cancer-free for years. But I also had a next-door neighbor who got the same diagnosis. She was treated, but succumbed to the disease not too long after.
My experience is not unique. Those of us who have been around the block a few times know people who have survived breast cancer and people who have died from it. Why the differences in results from person to person?
Part of the reason is that breast cancer is really several different diseases. There are four major types of the disease, with variations in those four categories. The four major types have the challenging names of basal-like, luminal A, luminal B and HER2-enriched.
Recently researchers announced a step forward in studying the different types of breast cancer, a step toward coming up with better treatments down the road.
Matthew Meyerson is one of the authors on a recent and major paper published in the journal Nature. He is a researcher with the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. Meyerson talked to National Public Radio about a project he and many other researchers completed studying 825 breast cancer patients.
"We basically studied the genomes of breast cancers from each of these women in comparison to the genomes of the rest of their bodies," Meyerson said to NPR.
As more knowledge about cancers accumulates, treatments can evolve in a positive direction. For example, certain genetic mutations may be behind basal-like breast cancer and ovarian cancer, especially in certain women. For them, it may be that future treatments could use ovarian cancer drugs for breast cancer treatment.
In the language of these matters, patients and researchers alike hope for a "silver bullet" that could be used in treatment, a medication or therapy plan that would make all the difference in survival rates. But Meyerson cautions that recent research, while promising, is a long way from anything like a silver bullet.
"I think in the end, to treat cancer, we're going to be developing a lot of specific silver bullets, but we'll need to use them in combination," Meyerson said.
Unfortunately, it may be years before treatment is changed due to the research recently announced. That's often the way with science: good work on the research frontier may come years before practical applications are developed for real-world difference in things like medical treatment.
That's the case in part because research must run down many avenues simultaneously, some of which will yield fruitful results and some of which simply won't.
"(Doing) genomic screening, that's not the end goal," said Fran Visco of the National Breast Cancer Coalition. "That is simply a tool, a step on the way to figuring out how to save lives."
According to the American Cancer Society, about 40,000 women die each year from breast cancer. That makes the malignancy second only to lung cancer in terms of deadly effects. Let's hope the treatments for breast cancer improve at a record-breaking pace.
Dr. E. Kirsten Peters was trained as a geologist at Princeton and Harvard. Her most recent book is The Whole Story of Climate, just published by Prometheus Books. This column is a service of the College of Agricultural, Human and Natural Resource Sciences at Washington State University.
Other Views
Another View: Research requires many steps
-
-
Another View: Attack on press is attack against all
It’s hard to think of any justification for the Justice Department to have snatched up thousands of phone records from the Associated Press, but there had better be a forthright explanation coming.
Continued ... -
Another View: Abusing authority inexcusable
When people talk about government posing a threat to citizens, a common topic these days is unmanned drones.
Continued ... -
Another View: Work to bring region together
It seems state Rep. Kurt Heise, R-Plymouth, doesn’t understand the meaning of “regional cooperation.”
Continued ... -
Another View: Animal neglect of any kind unacceptable
According to the Humane Society of the United States, Americans own about 78.2 million dogs and 86.4 million cats.
Continued ... -
Another View: Records seizure an insult to press
Distrust of government secrecy has been elevated to an exceptional level with the disclosure the Justice Department covertly examined two months of Associated Press phone records to determine who leaked details to the AP about a foiled terrorist plot.
Continued ... - Thursday, May 16, 2013
-
Another View: State roads see — and need — more attention
There’s no way to avoid it. In Michigan, spring and summer, always bring detours and orange cones, the calling cards of road construction.
Continued ... -
Another View: Taxes should be collected for online sales
If Michigan lawmakers are successful in passing measures to collect sales tax from online purchases, it could be the beginning of some major relief for small businesses around Superiorland — and for the cash-strapped state government.
Continued ... - Wednesday, May 15, 2013
-
Another View: More will be eligible for addiction treatment
Obamacare, like it or not, is going to revolutionize health care in the United States simply because many more people will become eligible for coverage.
Continued ... - Saturday, May 11, 2013
-
Another View: Don’t sign on to Internet sales tax
Citing a new era of Internet commerce, big business and government have teamed to fast track Senate legislation that would allow states to collect sales taxes on companies that reside outside their borders.
Continued ... -
Another View: Caffeinated food?
So how gullible are we? Food manufacturers say their caffeine-pumped food is intended for adults.
Continued ... - Thursday, May 9, 2013
-
Another View: Senate wants to give states more taxing power
Congress is taking a stab at tax fairness. At least, where states are concerned. If you’re looking for meaningful reform of the federal tax code, that’s going to have to wait.
Continued ... - Wednesday, May 8, 2013
-
Another View: Probe handling of intelligence
We welcome an investigation into the handling of intelligence related to suspects in the Boston Marathon bombing.
Continued ... - Saturday, May 4, 2013
-
Another View: Welfare drug testing latest insult by state GOP
Expensive, inefficient and insulting? That seems to be the question the Michigan Republican Party asks before proposing legislation these days - and if the answer is yes, they’re all in.
Continued ... -
Another View: Keep our promise to seniors
The United States has long been saddled by this nearly $800-billion-a-year monster, and it has only become more monstrous in recent years.
Continued ... - Tuesday, April 30, 2013
-
Another View: Open government is better government
Michigan lawmakers are studying a collection of changes to the state’s open records law, the Freedom of Information Act.
Continued ... - Saturday, April 27, 2013
-
Another View: Let experts manage Michigan's wildlife
Two Senate bills that would give the state Natural Resources Commission power to designate wildlife as game animals have opponents howling.
Continued ... -
Another View: No good deed goes unpunished
Taking the approach that no good deed or idea should go unpunished, Congress has stripped down an already stripped-down law aimed at limiting those with political clout from enriching themselves through insider trading.
Continued ... - Thursday, April 25, 2013
-
Another View: Helmet law proving it’s a bad idea
Michigan’s new helmet law saw more motorcycle fatalities in its first year on the books. That shouldn’t come as any surprise.
Continued ... - Saturday, April 20, 2013
-
Another View: Bill not just health policy, it’s bad policy
It’s tempting to snipe at Senate Bill 136, which would allow health care providers to opt out of performing any service on the ground of moral objection, with examples of the absurd:
Continued ... -
Another View: Cuts a worry as tourist season nears
Federal budget cuts due to the ongoing “sequestration” could throw a wet blanket on the summer tourist season in the Upper Peninsula — damaging the area’s economy and limiting opportunities for outdoor fun.
Continued ... - Tuesday, April 16, 2013
-
Another View: The Iron Lady remembered
Margaret Thatcher famously said in 1973, “I don’t think there will be a woman prime minister in my lifetime.” The statement became famous when six years later, she became Britain’s first.
Continued ... - Saturday, April 13, 2013
-
Another View: Snyder would likely veto bill
State Sen. Joe Hune does not like taxes much. And he abhors tax increases.
Continued ... -
Another View: Handwriting is core, needs to be taught
Cursive writing may be considered too “old school” by some, but we believe removing the penmanship skills will shortchange our students in many ways.
Continued ... - Wednesday, April 10, 2013
-
Another View: 'It shouldn't hurt to be a child' in Mich.
Of the many things we have to worry about, children’s safety should not be among them. Children are least able to protect themselves against abuse, yet society has not been able to guarantee their safety.
Continued ... - Tuesday, April 9, 2013
-
Another View: Ballast requirements step in right direction
Michigan — and the entire region — should benefit from new EPA requirements for purifying ballast water dumped from ships on the Great Lakes.
Continued ...
-
Another View: Attack on press is attack against all



