Wednesday, November 05, 2025

Landmark Global Decade Report reveals breakthroughs in advanced breast cancer but exposes a widening global equity gap





Associação Advanced Breast Cancer Global Alliance
Fatima Cardoso 

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Fatima Cardoso

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Credit: ABC Global Alliance




Lisbon, Portugal: The ABC Global Alliance today launched the Advanced Breast Cancer (ABC) Global Decade Report 2015–2025 — a landmark global assessment revealing a decade of remarkable scientific progress that has transformed ABC care for some patients in some countries, while many others around the world have yet to benefit.

The results expose profound and persistent inequalities that leave many patients behind. The report’s central theme, ‘Knowledge in Motion’, emphasises the urgent need to translate a decade of evidence and innovation into life-changing action for every person living with ABC.

These compelling findings drove the creation of the ABC Global Charter 2025–2035, which is also launched by the ABC Global Alliance today at the Advanced Breast Cancer Eighth International Consensus Conference (ABC8). The Charter sets out new ten-year roadmap to drive equitable progress and transform care for everyone with ABC, regardless of where they live, their cancer subtype, or their socioeconomic status. The report and global charter are published simultaneously today (Thursday) in The Breast. [1]

A decade of progress and persistent gaps

The report confirms that collective action over the past decade has yielded significant advances in ABC care, proving that progress is possible:

  • The assumption that ABC is a rapid death sentence, and that money spent treating it is wasted, has been proven wrong. The five-year median overall survival rate for women with ABC has risen to 33%, up from 26% a decade ago, with real-world data showing median survival for HER2+ disease exceeding 50 months in some regions.
  • The first truly international consensus guidelines for the management of ABC have been embedded in practice across multiple regions.
  • New ways of connecting data have provided the first reliable ABC prevalence estimates (an estimate of the number of people living with ABC) in countries like Australia and Northern Ireland.
  • Conversations around quality of life, stigma, workplace rights and psychological support have moved closer to the centre of global and national cancer policy.

 

Nevertheless, the uneven distribution of progress has only widened the gap between what is possible and what remains the reality for the majority of patients.

  • Median overall survival for triple-negative ABC has increased by less than three months in the past decade, remaining at just 13 months.
  • Disparities in access to biological or targeted therapies persist globally, with drugs such as trastuzumab — which for the last two decades has been the mainstay treatment for HER2+ ABC — is available in only 51% of low-middle income countries versus 93% of high-income countries.
  • Over half of all people with ABC (55%) report that they have never been offered any support services by their healthcare team.
  • While some laws and workplace protections exist, no country has effectively implemented a comprehensive legal framework to fully protect the working rights of people with ABC and their informal caregivers.

 

Dr Fatima Cardoso, medical oncologist and President of the ABC Global Alliance, said: “This report shows what a decade of collective action can achieve, proving that progress isn’t theoretical – it transforms lives. Yet progress is not the same as equity. Our challenge and commitment is to close the gaps in ABC care within and between countries.”

The human cost of inequity: a call to action for the next decade

The report draws on two global surveys conducted in 2024, including responses from 1,254 people with ABC across 59 countries and 461 healthcare professionals across 78 countries, both revealing the profound burden of ABC:

  • Quality of life and psychosocial needs remain unmet:
    • 79% of patients report that ABC has a negative impact on their emotional and psychological wellbeing.
    • Only 53% of healthcare providers report regularly referring patients to psychological support services.
  • Access to innovative care is limited:
    • 79% of people with ABC report never having participated in a clinical trial, a critical pathway for access to treatments.
    • High out-of-pocket costs are a global issue, with 60% of patients reporting a negative impact of ABC on their financial security.
  • Stigma and isolation remain pervasive:
    • Nearly half of people with ABC (47%) report that others do not understand their situation, leading to feelings of isolation which can impact a person’s quality of life.
  • Workplace rights remain unprotected in many countries:
    • 73% of people with ABC say the disease negatively affects their ability to work or study, with many facing a lack of support, difficulty returning to work, or job loss.

 

Dr Cardoso said: "This landmark global report marks a pivotal moment. We've proved that progress is possible, and now we must evolve our expectations to meet patients' needs today. This new charter is grounded in evidence, driven by the urgent need to turn proven potential into standard practice for all patients, in all regions, in all circumstances. Our ambition is to ensure that every person living with ABC has the chance to live as well as possible, for as long as possible – not just those in wealthy nations or with specific subtypes."

Looking to the future: The ABC Global Charter 2025–2035

To address these urgent challenges, the new ABC Global Charter sets ten ambitious, measurable goals for the next decade, from ensuring high-quality data collection and registry standards, to improving the legal and workplace rights for patients and their informal caregivers.

ABC Global Charter 2025–2035: ten key goals

  • Further improve survival in people with ABC by doubling median overall survival
  • Optimise care and outcomes for people with ABC by collecting high-quality data
  • Improve the quality of life of people with ABC
  • Ensure that every person with ABC is treated and cared for by a specialised multidisciplinary team according to high-quality guidelines
  • Improve communication between healthcare professionals and people with ABC and their caregivers
  • Meet the information needs of all people with ABC
  • Ensure all people with ABC have access to comprehensive, person-centred support services
  • Reduce misconceptions, stigma and isolation by improving understanding of ABC
  • Improve access to comprehensive care for people with ABC, regardless of their ability to pay
  • Improve the legal rights of people with ABC, including the right to continue or return to work.

 

The law turns a “blind eye” to the severe financial consequences of being in an abusive relationship, study warns





University of Exeter





The law is failing victims and survivors because it is turning a “blind eye” to the long-lasting and severe financial consequences of being in an abusive relationship, a new study warns.

The law should be reformed to make domestic abuse and its impacts on the victim-survivor a specific consideration when dividing financial assets, enabling awards to be enhanced.

This is only currently taken into account in rare and extreme cases in family law when assets are redistributed. The study says downplaying the financial impact of abuse creates an opportunity for perpetrators to continue abuse through the legal process.

The research, by Ellen Gordon-Bouvier, from the University of Exeter, says there is a need for a more responsive approach from the family justice system – one that acknowledges the importance of access to material resources to aid recovery from abuse. Making adjustments to financial settlements is one way that the law can try to reverse the impacts of an unequal marital relationship.

It should be possible to measure detriment in not only economic terms but also psychological or physical impacts.

To achieve fairness, the presence of domestic abuse is a relevant factor that must be considered by the court, even if it is ultimately determined that its presence should not impact the final award.

A finding of domestic abuse should ordinarily mean that the victim-survivor’s needs are given priority over those of the perpetrator.

Dr Gordon-Bouvier said: “The family justice system must change its approach if it is to fulfil its commitment to tackling domestic abuse and its impacts. Post-divorce asset division should be viewed as a means of ensuring that victim-survivors can recover from abuse. Of course there are inherent challenges involved in taking greater account of abuse when dividing assets.

“In its duty towards victim-survivors of domestic abuse, the state must respond in a holistic manner, which includes taking the presence of abuse into account when dividing assets on divorce and considering its impact on victim-survivors. The current stance, in which domestic abuse is ignored or subjected to very high thresholds for consideration is an example of the state failing victim-survivors.

“I am not arguing that financial remedies law should be the only or indeed the primary state response to domestic abuse. However the court’s jurisdiction to divide assets upon divorce represents an important source of material security to enable victim-survivors to more on and recover from an abusive relationship.”

Under section 25(2)(g) of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 (‘MCA’), the court can take into account the parties’ conduct only where “it would in the opinion of the court be inequitable to disregard it”, and the study says the courts have tended to interpret this narrowly.

Dr Gordon-Bouvier said: “Acknowledging the increased resources needed to recover from domestic abuse does not amount to punishing the perpetrator. It is simply a reflection that it would not be fair to divide the assets in a way that does not acknowledge what happened during the marriage and the long and short-term impacts of this. It also acknowledges that, in many cases, particularly in the case of economic abuse, that the perpetrator has derived a direct benefit from the abusive behaviour, predominantly through failing to share resources, and that this benefit should be corrected when the parties divorce.”

The study says where possible, orders requiring the perpetrator to make periodical payments or pay a lump sum in instalments should be avoided in favour of a clean break, as this leaves the victim-survivor vulnerable to the perpetrator defaulting.