HER2 negative breast cancer – Diagnostics

Go back

HER2-negative breast cancer is diagnosed when cancer cells in the breast don’t contain high levels of a protein called HER2. This type makes up about 80% of all breast cancer cases and requires specific testing to determine the right treatment approach. Understanding how doctors identify this cancer is the first step toward effective care.

Introduction: Who Should Undergo Diagnostics and When

If you notice any unusual changes in your breasts, it’s important to see a healthcare provider as soon as possible. Many people wonder when they should seek diagnostic testing, and the answer depends on both symptoms and screening recommendations. Regular breast cancer screenings are essential because breast cancer doesn’t always cause noticeable changes that you can see or feel.[1]

You should consider seeking medical attention if you experience changes in your breast’s size or shape, discover a new lump or hardened area in or near your breast or armpit that doesn’t change with your menstrual cycle, notice skin changes affecting your breast or nipple (such as dimpling, puckering, scaling, itching, or unusual discoloration), experience nipple discharge including bloody or clear fluid, or observe a nipple that pulls inward.[1] These symptoms don’t automatically mean you have cancer, as many of these changes occur with noncancerous conditions as well. This is exactly why diagnostic testing is so important—it helps distinguish between harmless and serious conditions.

⚠️ Important
Breast cancer doesn’t always cause visible or noticeable changes. This is why regular screenings are crucial even when you feel perfectly healthy. Many breast cancers are detected during routine mammograms before any symptoms appear, which often leads to earlier treatment and better outcomes.

Women with certain risk factors may need to start screenings earlier or undergo testing more frequently. These risk factors include inherited genetic mutations like BRCA1 or BRCA2, a personal or family history of breast cancer (especially in close relatives such as parents, siblings, or children), and long-term exposure to high levels of estrogen or progesterone—which can happen if you started your period very early or entered menopause late. Some forms of hormone therapy can also increase your risk.[1]

It’s worth noting that HER2-negative and HER2-positive breast cancers have identical symptoms, so your doctor cannot tell which type you have just by examining you.[2] This means that specialized testing on a tissue sample is always necessary to determine your exact type of breast cancer and guide your treatment plan.

Diagnostic Methods

Diagnosing HER2-negative breast cancer involves several steps, starting with initial screening and moving toward more specific testing to understand the exact nature of the cancer cells. The diagnostic process helps doctors not only confirm that cancer is present but also understand important characteristics of the cancer cells, which are called biomarkers. These biomarkers guide treatment decisions.[1]

Tissue Sample Collection

To determine whether breast cancer is HER2-negative, doctors need to examine a small piece of your tumor tissue. They obtain this sample either during a biopsy (a procedure where a needle or small surgical tool removes tissue) or during surgery if you’ve already had a tumor removed.[2] A biopsy is often the first step after an abnormal mammogram or physical exam finding, while surgical samples come from procedures like lumpectomy or mastectomy.

The tissue sample is sent to a laboratory where specialists analyze it to look at the cancer cells under a microscope and perform additional tests to identify specific proteins and receptors on the cell surface. This detailed examination tells doctors exactly what kind of breast cancer you have.

HER2 Status Testing

Once the tissue sample reaches the laboratory, specialists run tests to check for the presence of HER2 protein. HER2 stands for human epidermal growth factor receptor 2, which is a protein that helps control how breast cells grow and repair themselves. In healthy cells, HER2 works normally, but when cancer cells make too much of it, the cancer becomes more likely to multiply and spread.[2]

If your test shows that your cancer cells aren’t making a lot of extra HER2, your doctor will tell you that your breast cancer is HER2-negative. This classification is crucial because it tells your healthcare team which treatments will or won’t work for you. Treatments that target HER2 proteins won’t be effective if your cancer is HER2-negative, so your doctor will suggest different treatment options.[2]

Hormone Receptor Testing

Along with checking HER2 status, doctors also test for other important proteins called hormone receptors. These receptors respond to hormones in your blood, specifically estrogen and progesterone. Sometimes doctors refer to these separately as estrogen receptors (ER) and progesterone receptors (PR), but they often discuss all the different receptors together when describing your cancer.[2]

Your HER2-negative cancer will be classified as either hormone receptor-positive (HR-positive/HER2-negative) or hormone receptor-negative (HR-negative/HER2-negative). If your cancer is negative for HER2 and both types of hormone receptors, it’s called triple-negative breast cancer.[2] About 70% of breast cancers are HR-positive/HER2-negative, while only about 10 to 15% are HR-negative/HER2-negative or triple-negative.[2]

Understanding your complete receptor status—both HER2 and hormone receptors together—gives you and your doctors vital information about the biology of your cancer. This knowledge helps doctors decide which treatment is best to try first and what backup options you have if you need to try something different later.[2]

Additional Genetic Testing

In some cases, your doctor may look at other factors beyond HER2 and hormone receptors, including genetic changes in your cancer cells or other characteristics that could affect how quickly the cancer is likely to grow or spread.[2] While there isn’t a specific mutation that causes HER2-negative breast cancers in particular, inheriting gene mutations like BRCA1 or BRCA2 increases your overall risk of developing breast cancer.[1]

⚠️ Important
Cancer characteristics can change over time. If your HER2-negative cancer comes back or spreads, your doctor may want to test it again. The returning cancer might have different features than the original tumor, which could change your treatment options.

Imaging and Staging Tests

Beyond testing the cancer cells themselves, doctors use various imaging techniques to understand the size and location of your tumor and whether the cancer has spread. These tests help determine the stage of your cancer—information that’s just as important as knowing your HER2 status. Common imaging tests include mammography, ultrasound, MRI scans, CT scans, and bone scans, depending on your individual situation and what doctors need to learn about your cancer.

The combination of tissue analysis (showing HER2 status and hormone receptors) and imaging (showing stage and spread) gives your medical team a complete picture of your cancer. This comprehensive understanding allows them to create a treatment plan tailored specifically to your situation.

Diagnostics for Clinical Trial Qualification

Clinical trials are research studies that test new treatments or new ways of using existing treatments for breast cancer. If you’re considering joining a clinical trial, you’ll need to undergo specific diagnostic tests to determine if you qualify. These tests serve as standard criteria for enrolling patients and ensuring that the study results are accurate and meaningful.

Confirmed HER2-Negative Status

The most fundamental requirement for entering a HER2-negative breast cancer clinical trial is documented proof that your cancer is indeed HER2-negative. This means you must have had tissue testing that clearly shows your cancer cells don’t contain high levels of the HER2 protein. Clinical trials typically require this testing to be recent and performed using standardized laboratory methods to ensure accuracy and consistency across all study participants.

Hormone Receptor Status Documentation

Many clinical trials for HER2-negative breast cancer are designed specifically for either hormone receptor-positive or hormone receptor-negative (triple-negative) subtypes. Therefore, you’ll need clear documentation of whether your cancer cells have estrogen and progesterone receptors. This information determines which clinical trials you’re eligible for, as treatments being studied often target specific receptor combinations.

Disease Stage and Spread Assessment

Clinical trials usually enroll patients at specific stages of cancer. Some trials focus on early-stage disease that hasn’t spread beyond the breast, while others study advanced or metastatic breast cancer (cancer that has spread to other parts of the body). You’ll need imaging tests and sometimes additional biopsies to document exactly where your cancer is located and whether it has spread to lymph nodes or other organs. These assessments help researchers ensure they’re studying treatments in the right patient population.

Previous Treatment History

Many clinical trials have requirements about what treatments you’ve received in the past. Some trials are only open to patients who haven’t had any treatment yet, while others specifically enroll people whose cancer has returned after previous therapy. Your medical records documenting all previous treatments—including surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, and hormone therapy—will be reviewed to confirm your eligibility.

Genetic Testing for Certain Trials

Some clinical trials target very specific genetic characteristics of cancer cells. For these studies, you might need additional genetic testing beyond the standard HER2 and hormone receptor tests. For example, trials studying PARP inhibitors often require testing to see if you have mutations in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes. Other trials might look for different genetic markers that could predict whether a particular experimental treatment will work.

Overall Health Assessment

Before enrolling in a clinical trial, you’ll undergo tests to assess your overall health and how well your organs are functioning. These typically include blood tests to check your liver and kidney function, heart tests to ensure your heart is strong enough for certain treatments, and performance status evaluations to measure how well you can carry out daily activities. These assessments protect your safety by ensuring that you’re healthy enough to receive the experimental treatment being studied.

The diagnostic requirements for clinical trials are more extensive than standard care because researchers need detailed, standardized information to understand how new treatments work. While this means more testing, participating in clinical trials gives you access to potentially beneficial new treatments that aren’t yet widely available.

Prognosis and Survival Rate

Prognosis

The outlook for HER2-negative breast cancer generally depends on several factors working together, rather than HER2 status alone. Breast cancer that’s HER2-negative tends to have a better outlook than HER2-positive breast cancer because HER2-negative cancer is typically less aggressive.[2] However, your individual prognosis depends on many other elements including the stage of cancer when it’s discovered, whether the cancer is hormone receptor-positive or triple-negative, your overall health, how well the cancer responds to treatment, and whether it spreads to other parts of your body.

Hormone receptor-positive/HER2-negative breast cancer, which accounts for about 70% of all breast cancers, often has a favorable prognosis because there are many effective hormone-based treatments available.[1] Triple-negative breast cancer (HR-negative/HER2-negative), which makes up about 11% of cases, can be more challenging to treat because it doesn’t respond to hormone therapies or HER2-targeted treatments. However, treatment advances continue to improve outcomes for this subtype as well.[1]

Survival Rate

Most breast cancer diagnoses are HER2-negative, with about 4 out of 5 breast cancers falling into this category.[2] When diagnosed early, HR-positive/HER2-negative breast cancer has a positive prognosis, meaning many people can expect favorable outcomes with appropriate treatment.[7] Specific survival statistics vary widely based on the stage at diagnosis, whether the cancer has hormone receptors, and individual patient factors.

It’s important to remember that survival statistics are based on large groups of people and may not reflect your personal situation. Your healthcare team can provide more personalized information about your outlook based on your specific cancer characteristics, overall health, and how you respond to treatment. Additionally, cancer treatments continue to improve, which means that survival rates are generally getting better over time as new therapies become available.

Ongoing Clinical Trials on HER2 negative breast cancer

  • Study of Pembrolizumab with Chemotherapy for Patients with HER2-Negative Inflammatory Breast Cancer

    Recruiting

    2 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    France
  • Study on Preoperative Treatment for HER2-Negative Breast Cancer Using Pembrolizumab, Paclitaxel, and Carboplatin in Patients Not Responding to Initial Chemotherapy

    Recruiting

    2 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Poland
  • Study on Everolimus and Exemestane for Patients with Metastatic Breast Cancer

    Not yet recruiting

    2 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Investigated drugs:
    Hungary
  • Study of Pembrolizumab and Olaparib for Patients with Advanced HER2 Negative Breast Cancer and Specific Genetic Mutations

    Not recruiting

    2 1 1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Germany
  • Study of Fadraciclib in Adults with Advanced Solid Tumors (Including Breast, Colorectal, Endometrial, Ovarian, Biliary Tract, and Liver Cancer) and Lymphoma

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Spain
  • Study of palbociclib with hormone therapy versus hormone therapy alone in patients with recurrent hormone receptor-positive/HER2-negative breast cancer after surgery

    Not recruiting

    3 1 1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Austria France Hungary Italy Spain
  • Study of Trastuzumab Deruxtecan for Patients with HER2-Low Breast Cancer and New or Worsening Brain Metastases

    Not recruiting

    2 1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Austria Spain
  • Study on Olaparib for Patients with Advanced HER2-Negative Breast Cancer and Specific Genetic Mutations

    Not recruiting

    2 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Investigated drugs:
    Spain
  • Study of Milademetan and Fulvestrant for Patients with Advanced or Metastatic Breast Cancer with GATA3 Mutation, ER-Positive, HER2-Negative

    Not recruiting

    2 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Investigated drugs:
    France
  • Study on the Effect of Tamoxifen and Chemotherapy in Patients with Hormone Receptor-Positive, HER2-Negative Breast Cancer with Low Recurrence Scores

    Not recruiting

    3 1 1 1
    Spain

References

https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/her2-negative-breast-cancer

https://www.webmd.com/breast-cancer/breast-cancer-her2-negative

https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/326099

https://www.upmc.com/services/breast/conditions/her2-negative-breast-cancer

https://webmd.com/breast-cancer/breast-cancer-her2-negative

https://www.bcrf.org/about-breast-cancer/her2-status-breast-cancer/

https://www.everydayhealth.com/breast-cancer/her2-negative-breast-cancer/guide/

https://www.facingourrisk.org/info/risk-management-and-treatment/cancer-treatment/by-cancer-type/breast/stages-and-subtypes

https://www.healthline.com/health/breast-cancer/her2-positive-vs-her2-negative

https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/her2-negative-breast-cancer

https://www.webmd.com/breast-cancer/her2-neg-metastatic-treatment

https://www.healthline.com/health/breast-cancer/her2-negative-breast-cancer-treatment

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8931202/

https://www.facingourrisk.org/XRAY/treatment-for-HER2-low-metastatic-breast-cancer

https://www.upmc.com/services/breast/conditions/her2-negative-breast-cancer

https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/her2-negative-breast-cancer

https://health.clevelandclinic.org/self-care-her2-negative-metastatic-breast-cancer

https://www.nationalbreastcancer.org/breast-cancer-stage-4/

https://www.everydayhealth.com/breast-cancer/self-care/

https://www.webmd.com/breast-cancer/her2-neg-metastatic-treatment

https://tnbcfoundation.org/

https://www.healthline.com/health/breast-cancer/her2-negative

https://www.mdanderson.org/cancerwise/triple-negative-breast-cancer-5-things-you-should-know.h00-158986656.html

https://medlineplus.gov/diagnostictests.html

https://www.questdiagnostics.com/

https://www.healthdirect.gov.au/diagnostic-tests

https://www.who.int/health-topics/diagnostics

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6558629/

https://www.yalemedicine.org/clinical-keywords/diagnostic-testsprocedures

https://www.health.harvard.edu/diagnostic-tests-and-medical-procedures

FAQ

How do doctors test for HER2-negative breast cancer?

Doctors test for HER2 status by examining a small piece of tumor tissue obtained during a biopsy or surgery. Laboratory specialists run tests on this tissue to check whether the cancer cells contain high levels of HER2 protein. If the cells don’t have excess HER2, your cancer is classified as HER2-negative.[2]

Is HER2-negative breast cancer the same as triple-negative breast cancer?

Not necessarily. HER2-negative means the cancer lacks high levels of HER2 protein, but it could still have hormone receptors for estrogen or progesterone. Triple-negative breast cancer is a specific type of HER2-negative cancer that also lacks both estrogen and progesterone receptors, making it negative for all three receptors.[2]

Why is it important to know if my breast cancer is HER2-negative?

Knowing your HER2 status—together with your hormone receptor status—tells you and your doctors about the biology of your cancer. This information is crucial because it helps doctors decide which treatment will work best for you and what options you have if you need to try something different later. Some treatments specifically target HER2, so they won’t work if your cancer is HER2-negative.[2]

Do I need genetic testing if I have HER2-negative breast cancer?

There isn’t a specific mutation that causes HER2-negative breast cancers in particular. However, if you have inherited gene mutations like BRCA1 or BRCA2, your overall breast cancer risk increases. Your doctor may recommend genetic testing based on your personal and family health history, especially if you have close relatives with breast cancer.[1]

Can HER2-negative status change over time?

Yes, cancers can change over time. If your HER2-negative cancer returns or spreads to other parts of your body, your doctor may want to test it again because the returning cancer might have different characteristics than the original tumor. This could potentially change your treatment options.[2]

🎯 Key Takeaways

  • HER2-negative breast cancer can’t be identified by symptoms alone—you need laboratory testing on tissue samples to know your HER2 status for certain.
  • About 80% of breast cancers are HER2-negative, making it the most common type, but it still requires specific diagnostic testing to confirm.
  • Understanding your complete receptor profile (HER2 status plus hormone receptor status) is essential because it guides your entire treatment plan.
  • Regular screening is crucial because breast cancer often doesn’t cause noticeable changes in early stages when treatment is most effective.
  • Clinical trial participation requires more extensive diagnostic testing than standard care but may provide access to promising new treatments.
  • HER2-negative breast cancer generally has a better outlook than HER2-positive because it tends to be less aggressive.
  • Cancer characteristics can change if disease returns, which is why doctors may repeat testing even if you were previously diagnosed.
  • Knowing you’re HER2-negative rules out certain treatments but opens the door to many other effective therapy options tailored to your specific cancer type.