A new test could help doctors identify which patients are most likely to benefit from chemotherapy after breast cancer surgery, researchers in the UK say.

More women with breast cancer could be spared chemotherapy if doctors switched to a new genetic test, UK research shows.

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The EndoPredict test can more accurately predict whether a woman's cancer will spread around the body than the standard test used on the NHS.

It also can produce results in just a few days compared to around 14 days for the current test, Oncotype DX, which has to be posted to the US.

Both tests provide information about the genetic make-up of a tumour to help predict how cancer might develop over a decade.
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This information can be used to inform personalised treatment decisions by identifying which patients would be most likely to benefit from treatment with chemotherapy after surgery and those who won't need it, thereby avoiding unnecessary side-effects.

Both tests are for women with oestrogen receptor positive, HER2 negative (ER+/HER2-) disease, which accounts for around two-thirds of all breast cancers.

More than 33,000 women are diagnosed with ER+/HER2- breast cancer each year in the UK.

The study - led by researchers at the Institute of Cancer Research in London and the Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust in collaboration with Queen Mary University of London, and published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute - compared the performance of EndoPredict and Oncotype DX.

A woman's risk of her cancer spreading is calculated using the results from the genetic test combined with the size of her tumour and whether disease has spread to the lymph nodes.

Women are classed as low risk if they have less than a 10 per cent decade-long risk of their cancer spreading.

In the study, just 5.8 per cent of all patients identified as low risk by EndoPredict went on to see their cancer spread over a decade compared with 10.1 per cent of patients identified as low risk by Oncotype DX.

Study lead author Dr Richard Buus, from the Institute of Cancer Research, London, said: "This study showed that a new test is more accurate than the current NHS standard test at detecting women at lowest risk of their breast cancer spreading to other parts of the body in the long-term.

"It could help improve treatment for a large number of women with breast cancer by allowing doctors to better predict which women are least likely to go on to develop secondary cancer - and could therefore be spared from undergoing the chemotherapy often offered early on in treatment to reduce that risk."

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