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    Home > Headlines > Blood test-guided treatment with AstraZeneca pill cuts breast cancer progression risk
    Headlines

    Blood test-guided treatment with AstraZeneca pill cuts breast cancer progression risk

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on June 1, 2025

    4 min read

    Last updated: January 23, 2026

    Blood test-guided treatment with AstraZeneca pill cuts breast cancer progression risk - Headlines news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
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    Quick Summary

    AstraZeneca's camizestrant pill, guided by blood tests, cuts breast cancer progression risk by 56%, potentially changing treatment practices.

    AstraZeneca's Blood Test-Driven Treatment Reduces Breast Cancer Progression

    By Julie Steenhuysen

    CHICAGO (Reuters) -Treating breast cancer patients with AstraZeneca's experimental pill camizestrant at the first sign of resistance to standard therapies cut the risk of disease progression or death by half, a finding that could be practice changing, experts said on Sunday.

    The results, presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology meeting in Chicago, mark the first use of a blood test called a liquid biopsy to indicate the need for a change in treatment in women with a common form of breast cancer, even before tumor growth can be detected on imaging.

    The early switch approach in women with hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer resulted in a 56% reduction in the risk of disease progression or death, said Dr. Eleonora Teplinsky, an oncologist at Valley-Mount Sinai Comprehensive Cancer Care and an ASCO breast cancer expert.

    "When patients progress on scans, we're already behind," Teplinsky said at a media briefing. She said an early switch approach, before disease progression, allows doctors "to essentially stay ahead of the curve."

    Camizestrant is not yet FDA-approved, but Teplinsky said she believes the data will likely result in a new treatment paradigm.

    The trial involved 3,256 patients with advanced hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer, the most common type in which hormones such as estrogen fuel cancer growth. These cancers lack high levels of HER2, another cancer driver.

    Women in the trial had at least six months of treatment with aromatase inhibitors that block hormones fueling the cancer, as well as targeted drugs called CDK4/6 inhibitors such as Novartis' Kisqali, Pfizer's Ibrance or Eli Lilly's Verzenio, which block an enzyme that fuels cancer growth.

    About 40% of patients treated with aromatase inhibitors develop mutations in the estrogen receptor 1 gene called ESR1 mutations, a sign of early drug resistance.

    Camizestrant and similar drugs called selective estrogen receptor degraders, or SERDS, block estrogen receptor signaling in cancer cells.

    In the trial, researchers used blood tests to look for ESR1 mutations until 315 patients were identified. They were randomly assigned to either switch to camizestrant plus the CDK4/6 inhibitor or continue with standard treatment plus a placebo.

    The researchers found that it took 16 months for the disease to progress in women who got camizestrant, compared with 9.2 months in those who continued on standard therapy, a statistically significant difference in a measure known as progression-free survival.

    No new side effects were reported and few patients from either group dropped out due to side effects.

    "This is going to be very impactful for our patients," said Dr. Hope Rugo, head of breast medical oncology at City of Hope in Duarte, California. The question, she said, is how do doctors incorporate the testing into clinical practice.

    THE FUTURE OF CANCER TREATMENT

    AstraZeneca Chief Executive Pascal Soriot in a press briefing acknowledged that monitoring patients for drug resistance before cancer progresses would require a switch in practice, but said it represents the future of cancer treatment.

    "It will be complicated in the beginning," he said, "but over time, like everything else, we will manage to simplify it and it will become part of what people do."

    In a separate trial, adding AstraZeneca's immunotherapy Imfinzi to standard treatment before and after surgery in patients with early-stage stomach and esophageal cancers helped delay cancer progression or recurrence compared to chemotherapy alone.

    The global study of nearly 950 patients tested Imfinzi, known chemically as durvalumab, in combination with a chemotherapy regimen called FLOT given around the time of initial cancer surgery.

    The durvalumab plus FLOT combination led to a 29% reduction in disease recurrence, progression or death, referred to as event-free survival, compare with those who received the chemotherapy regimen alone.

    "We demonstrate that immunotherapy works in early-stage disease, which is great," lead study author Dr. Yelena Janjigian of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York told reporters at the meeting.

    "We did not see any new safety signals, so this will change practice for our patients, which is exciting to see."

    Both studies were also published on Sunday in the New England Journal of Medicine.

    (Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Bill Berkrot)

    Key Takeaways

    • •AstraZeneca's camizestrant reduces breast cancer progression risk by 56%.
    • •The treatment uses liquid biopsy for early detection of drug resistance.
    • •Camizestrant is not yet FDA-approved but shows promising results.
    • •The trial involved 3,256 patients with hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer.
    • •The study suggests a new treatment paradigm for cancer management.

    Frequently Asked Questions about Blood test-guided treatment with AstraZeneca pill cuts breast cancer progression risk

    1What is camizestrant and how does it work?

    Camizestrant is an experimental pill developed by AstraZeneca that acts as a selective estrogen receptor degrader. It blocks estrogen receptor signaling in cancer cells, which is crucial for treating hormone receptor-positive breast cancer.

    2What were the results of the trial involving camizestrant?

    The trial showed a 56% reduction in the risk of disease progression or death for patients who switched to camizestrant after showing resistance to standard therapies, compared to those who continued with standard treatment.

    3What is the significance of the liquid biopsy in this study?

    The liquid biopsy was used to detect ESR1 mutations in patients, indicating early drug resistance. This allowed for timely treatment adjustments before disease progression occurred.

    4What did Dr. Hope Rugo say about the impact of this treatment?

    Dr. Hope Rugo emphasized that the early switch approach would be very impactful for patients, highlighting the need for doctors to incorporate this new treatment paradigm into their practices.

    5What other trials were mentioned in the article?

    The article also discussed a separate trial where AstraZeneca's immunotherapy Imfinzi, combined with chemotherapy, showed a 29% reduction in disease recurrence for early-stage stomach and esophageal cancers.

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