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Use of Molecular Tools to Identify Patients With Indolent Breast Cancers With Ultralow Risk Over 2 Decades.
- Source :
-
JAMA oncology [JAMA Oncol] 2017 Nov 01; Vol. 3 (11), pp. 1503-1510. - Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- Importance: The frequency of cancers with indolent behavior has increased with screening. Better tools to identify indolent tumors are needed to avoid overtreatment.<br />Objective: To determine if a multigene classifier is associated with indolent behavior of invasive breast cancers in women followed for 2 decades.<br />Design, Setting, and Participants: This is a secondary analysis of a randomized clinical trial of tamoxifen vs no systemic therapy, with more than 20-year follow-up. An indolent threshold (ultralow risk) of the US Food and Drug Administration-cleared MammaPrint 70-gene expression score was established above which no breast cancer deaths occurred after 15 years in the absence of systemic therapy. Immunohistochemical markers (n = 727 women) and Agilent microarrays, for MammaPrint risk scoring (n = 652 women), were performed from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded primary tumor blocks. Participants were postmenopausal women with clinically detected node-negative breast cancers treated with mastectomy or lumpectomy and radiation enrolled in the Stockholm tamoxifen (STO-3) trial, 1976 to 1990.<br />Exposures: After 2 years of tamoxifen vs no systemic therapy, regardless of hormone receptor status, patients without relapse who reconsented were further randomized to 3 additional years or none.<br />Main Outcomes and Measures: Breast cancer-specific survival assessed by Kaplan-Meier analyses and multivariate Cox proportional hazard modeling, adjusted for treatment, patient age, year of diagnosis, tumor size, grade, hormone receptors, and ERBB2/HER2 and Ki67 status.<br />Results: In this secondary analysis of node-negative postmenopausal women, conducted in the era before mammography screening, among the 652 women with MammaPrint scoring available (median age, 62.8 years of age), 377 (58%) and 275 (42%) were MammaPrint low and high risk, respectively, while 98 (15%) were ultralow risk. At 20 years, women with 70-gene high and low tumors but not ultralow tumors had a significantly higher risk of disease-specific death compared with ultralow-risk patients by Cox analysis (hazard ratios, 4.73 [95% CI, 1.38-16.22] and 4.54 [95% CI, 1.40-14.80], respectively). There were no deaths in the ultralow-risk tamoxifen-treated arm at 15 years, and these patients had a 20-year disease-specific survival rate of 97%, whereas for untreated patients the survival rate was 94%. Recursive partitioning identified ultralow risk as the most significant predictor of good outcome. In tumors "not ultralow risk," tumor size greater than 2 cm was the most predictive of outcome.<br />Conclusions and Relevance: The ultralow-risk threshold of the 70-gene MammaPrint assay can identify patients whose long-term systemic risk of death from breast cancer after surgery alone is exceedingly low.
- Subjects :
- Antineoplastic Agents, Hormonal therapeutic use
Biomarkers, Tumor analysis
Breast Neoplasms chemistry
Breast Neoplasms mortality
Breast Neoplasms therapy
Chemotherapy, Adjuvant
Disease-Free Survival
Female
Humans
Immunohistochemistry
Kaplan-Meier Estimate
Mastectomy
Mastectomy, Segmental
Middle Aged
Multivariate Analysis
Predictive Value of Tests
Proportional Hazards Models
Radiotherapy, Adjuvant
Risk Assessment
Risk Factors
Sweden
Tamoxifen therapeutic use
Time Factors
Treatment Outcome
Tumor Burden
Biomarkers, Tumor genetics
Breast Neoplasms genetics
Gene Expression Profiling methods
Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis
Transcriptome
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 2374-2445
- Volume :
- 3
- Issue :
- 11
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- JAMA oncology
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 28662222
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jamaoncol.2017.1261