Advertisement

What is triple-negative breast cancer?

Knowing that breast cancer is triple-negative can help predict what treatments might be effective or ineffective.

Results of a breast cancer image scan.

As healthcare researchers have learned more about the biology and genetics of breast cancer, they have learned new ways of categorizing breast cancers. Two pieces of information that healthcare providers will look for while diagnosing breast cancer are hormone-receptor-status and HER2 status.

Hormone receptors are proteins that are found on the surface of some breast cancer cells. There are two types of hormone receptors that are found on the surface of some breast cancers—estrogen receptors (ER) and progesterone receptors (PR). Depending on the type, these proteins attract the hormones estrogen and progesterone, and allow those proteins to attach to cancer cells. The cancer cells can use these proteins to promote the growth and spread of more cancer cells.

HER2 (human epidermal growth factor receptor 2) is a different type of protein that can also promote the growth and spread of some cancer cells. Cancer cells that make too much of this protein will attract growth hormones to the cell. The cancer cells will use these growth hormones to promote their division and spread.

Determining the hormone receptor status and HER status involves a biopsy (taking a tissue sample of a breast tumor), which is sent to a lab for testing. Testing for HER2 status and hormone-receptor status helps healthcare providers determine what treatments might be effective or ineffective against a particular cancer.

Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is breast cancer that is ER-negative, PR-negative, and HER2-negative.

Treating TNBC

Receiving the news that breast cancer is triple-negative may feel disheartening for some—triple-negative cancer tends to be aggressive, and treatment with anti-cancer drugs that target HER2 receptors and hormone receptors are unlikely to be effective. However, there are other effective treatment options for TNBC and more therapies are becoming available.

A treatment plan for triple-negative breast cancer may involve a combination of chemotherapy, radiation therapy, and surgery—though the specific variations of these therapies will depend on a number of factors about the cancer and the person who has cancer. It is important to remember that not every therapy is right for every person and there is never a guarantee that a therapy will work.

Because each case of breast cancer is different, treatment is individualized—when putting together a treatment plan, a healthcare team will consider factors that include (but are not limited to) a person’s age, overall health, medical history, and preferences, as well as the type of cancer, the stage, the size and locations of the tumor, symptoms caused by the cancer, and any cancer treatments that have been used in the past.

A treatment plan may also include some of the newer therapies for triple negative breast cancer. In 2019, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the first cancer regimen for TNBC that includes an immunotherapy. The immunotherapy drug does not target cancer cells directly, but helps the immune system recognize and attack cancer cells. It targets tumors that are positive for a protein called PD-L1 and is used in combination with a chemotherapy drug.

In 2020, the FDA approved the first targeted therapy for TNBC. This therapy works by attaching to a protein found in the cell membrane of some cancer cells, disrupting the cancer's ability to function and delivering an anti-cancer agent into those cells.

People with TNBC may also consider participating in a clinical trial, which may allow access to therapies that are not yet available as part of a standard treatment regimen.

Article sources open article sources

Mayo Clinic. "Breast cancer types: What your type means."
Susan G. Komen. "Tumor Characteristics."
American Cancer Society. "Breast cancer types: What your type means."
Living Beyond Breast Cancer. "Hormone Receptor Status."
American Cancer Society. "Breast Cancer HER2 Status."
MedlinePlus. "HER2 (Breast Cancer) Testing."
UpToDate. "Patient education: Breast cancer guide to diagnosis and treatment (Beyond the Basics)."
American Cancer Society. "Triple-negative Breast Cancer."
Living Beyond Breast Cancer. "Guide to Understanding Triple-Negative Breast Cancer."
Johns Hopkins Medicine. "Triple Negative Breast Cancer."
Medical News Today. "What to know about triple-negative breast cancer."
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "Triple-Negative Breast Cancer."
American Cancer Society. "Treatment of Triple-negative Breast Cancer."
American Cancer Society. "Questions to Ask Your Doctor About Breast Cancer."
National Cancer Institute. "Atezolizumab Approved for Some Patients with Triple-Negative Breast Cancer."
U.S. Food & Drug Administration. "FDA Approves New Therapy for Triple Negative Breast Cancer That Has Spread, Not Responded to Other Treatments."

Featured Content

article

Continuing to work when you have metastatic breast cancer

Seven things people with metastatic breast cancer should consider when making decisions about work.
article

How does breast cancer metastasize?

Learn how cancer cells spread from tumors in the breasts to other locations in the body.
article

What are the biomarkers for metastatic breast cancer?

How hormone receptors and HER2 status may influence treatment decisions for metastatic breast cancer.
video

Ask the experts: metastatic breast cancer

In the United States, women of color have higher rates of metastatic breast cancer than white women.
video

My story: metastatic breast cancer

Deltra shares what she has learned—and what she hopes others can learn—about metastatic breast cancer in women of color.