A medical researcher reviewing cancer treatment data in a laboratory, for an article about breast cancer immunotherapy

Australian researchers nearly double cure rates for the most common breast cancer

A team of Australian cancer researchers has achieved what many oncologists consider a remarkable leap forward: combining breast cancer immunotherapy with standard chemotherapy to nearly double cure rates for hormone receptor-positive breast cancer — the most common form of the disease worldwide. The results are already reshaping how clinicians think about treating early-stage breast cancer before surgery.

At a glance

  • Breast cancer immunotherapy: Australian researchers tested a combination of immunotherapy and chemotherapy in patients with hormone receptor-positive (HR+) breast cancer — the subtype that accounts for roughly 70% of all breast cancer diagnoses globally.
  • Cure rate improvement: The combination treatment nearly doubled the rate of patients achieving a pathological complete response, meaning no detectable cancer remained in the breast or lymph nodes at the time of surgery — a strong predictor of long-term cure.
  • Clinical significance: Pathological complete response rates in HR+ breast cancer have historically been low, often below 20%, making this result a potentially major step for a cancer type that has lagged behind other subtypes in responding to immunotherapy.

Why the most common breast cancer has been the hardest to treat with immunotherapy

Breast cancer is not one disease. It comes in several subtypes, and treatments that work dramatically for one can barely move the needle for another.

HR+ breast cancer — driven by the hormones estrogen and progesterone — is the most frequently diagnosed subtype, affecting millions of people each year. It tends to grow more slowly than other subtypes, but it has also been stubbornly resistant to immunotherapy, which has shown remarkable results in cancers like triple-negative breast cancer and melanoma. HR+ tumors are often described as “immunologically cold” — they don’t attract the immune system’s attention the way other cancers do.

The Australian team’s finding suggests that pairing immunotherapy with chemotherapy may help warm up these tumors, making them visible to the immune system in a way that either treatment alone could not achieve. Research into breast cancer treatment has advanced considerably in recent decades, but improving outcomes specifically for HR+ patients before surgery — known as neoadjuvant treatment — has remained a persistent challenge.

How the combination works

Immunotherapy works by releasing the brakes on the immune system, allowing it to recognize and attack cancer cells. Checkpoint inhibitors — the most widely used class of immunotherapy drugs — block proteins that cancer cells use to hide from immune surveillance.

The challenge with HR+ tumors is that they tend to suppress immune activity in the tissue around them. Adding chemotherapy to the mix may disrupt that suppression, clearing a path for the immune system to engage.

This approach has already been validated in other breast cancer subtypes. The KEYNOTE-522 trial, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, demonstrated that adding the checkpoint inhibitor pembrolizumab to chemotherapy significantly improved outcomes in triple-negative breast cancer. The Australian work extends that logic — carefully, and with important caveats — into the HR+ space, where the biology is different and the hurdles are considerably higher.

Australia has built a strong reputation in oncology research. Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre in Melbourne, one of the Southern Hemisphere’s leading cancer research institutions, has contributed to several landmark trials in recent years, part of a broader tradition of Australian contributions to global cancer science.

What “nearly doubling cure rates” actually means

When researchers describe nearly doubling cure rates, they are referring to pathological complete response — the absence of any residual invasive cancer in breast tissue and lymph nodes after neoadjuvant treatment. It is the closest proxy oncologists have for long-term cure in this setting.

Patients who achieve a pathological complete response have significantly better long-term survival outcomes. For HR+ breast cancer, where those rates have historically been modest, even a moderate improvement can translate into thousands of additional survivors each year worldwide.

The World Health Organization estimates that breast cancer is now the most commonly diagnosed cancer globally, with over 2.3 million new cases recorded annually. The majority of those are HR+ cases, meaning any treatment advance in this subtype has an outsized effect on the total number of people who can be helped.

The honest limits of the result

Immunotherapy is not without cost. Checkpoint inhibitors can cause serious immune-related side effects, from lung and liver inflammation to hormonal disruption. For HR+ breast cancer patients — many of whom have excellent long-term prognoses even with standard treatment — the risk-benefit calculation requires careful individual assessment, and clinicians will need robust long-term data before this combination becomes routine care.

Questions remain about which patients within the HR+ category benefit most, what the optimal dosing and sequencing looks like, and whether the improvement in pathological complete response ultimately translates into better overall survival across decades of follow-up. These are the questions that will drive the next phase of clinical research.

Still, for a cancer type that has waited the longest for breast cancer immunotherapy to deliver on its promise, a near-doubling of response rates is the kind of result that changes the direction of research. Breast Cancer Trials Australia, one of the key networks through which Australian research reaches patients, has helped establish the country as a meaningful contributor to the global effort to make this disease survivable for everyone it touches. For the millions of people diagnosed with HR+ breast cancer each year, that progress is personal.

Read more

For more on this story, see: CancerActive

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

About this article

  • 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
  • 🌍 It aims to be inspirational but clear-eyed, accurate, and evidence-based, and grounded in care for the Earth, peace and belonging for all, and human evolution.
  • 💬 Leave your notes and suggestions in the comments below — I will do my best to review and implement where appropriate.
  • ✉️ One verified piece of good news, one insight from Antihero Project, every weekday morning. Subscribe free.
— **A note on the source URL:** The URL provided (https://www.canceractive.com/article/issue-1–2007) appears to reference a 2007 CancerActive article, which does not align with the story’s content about a recent Australian immunotherapy trial. The source file content was also corrupted binary data that could not be read. I’ve used the URL exactly as instructed, but you may want to verify whether this is the correct source link before publishing. If the actual source is a different publication (such as New Atlas, as referenced in the existing post), the source credit line should be updated accordingly.

More Good News

  • A mother holding a newborn in a hospital setting for an article about the Detroit RxKids cash program

    Detroit RxKids sends .4 million in free cash to new mothers in its first month

    Detroit RxKids cash program distributed .4 million in its first month of citywide operation, reaching hundreds of pregnant women and new mothers across one of America’s most economically strained cities. The program, designed by Flint water crisis whistleblower Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha, provides 00 monthly during pregnancy and 00 monthly through a child’s first year with no spending restrictions. Detroit has among the highest infant mortality rates of any major U.S. city, making the intervention urgent and overdue. Research consistently shows unconditional cash transfers improve maternal health, reduce food insecurity, and support early brain development without reducing workforce participation.


  • A row of electric buses at a charging depot for an article about electric buses India

    Telangana orders 915 electric buses in a major clean transit push

    Electric buses in India took a major step forward as Telangana ordered 915 zero-emission vehicles, one of the largest single clean transit procurements in the country’s history. The purchase will serve routes across Hyderabad and other urban centers, reducing air pollution for millions of residents who depend on public buses and have the least ability to escape street-level exhaust. The order builds on India’s PM e-Bus Sewa scheme, which targets 10,000 electric buses nationwide, and adds real momentum to a transition that analysts say is becoming increasingly economically compelling. As India’s renewable energy grid expands, the emissions benefit of each…


  • Aerial view of remote Pacific ocean islands and turquoise waters for an article about Chile marine protection

    Chile expands ocean protection to cover more than one million square kilometres of sea

    Chile marine protection surpasses one million square kilometres as the country designates vast stretches of its Pacific waters as fully protected ocean, barring industrial fishing, deep-sea mining, and oil exploration. The move shields critical habitat for blue whales, whale sharks, sea turtles, and hundreds of species found nowhere else on Earth. Indigenous communities, including the Rapa Nui and Kawésqar peoples, were central advocates for the protections. The designation meaningfully advances the global 30×30 goal of protecting 30 percent of the ocean by 2030, a threshold scientists consider essential to halting catastrophic biodiversity loss.



Coach, writer, and recovering hustle hero. I help purpose-driven humans do good in the world in dark times - without the burnout.