Literature DB >> 22198468

Chemotherapy response and recurrence-free survival in neoadjuvant breast cancer depends on biomarker profiles: results from the I-SPY 1 TRIAL (CALGB 150007/150012; ACRIN 6657).

Laura J Esserman1, Donald A Berry, Maggie C U Cheang, Christina Yau, Charles M Perou, Lisa Carey, Angela DeMichele, Joe W Gray, Kathleen Conway-Dorsey, Marc E Lenburg, Meredith B Buxton, Sarah E Davis, Laura J van't Veer, Clifford Hudis, Koei Chin, Denise Wolf, Helen Krontiras, Leslie Montgomery, Debu Tripathy, Constance Lehman, Minetta C Liu, Olufunmilayo I Olopade, Hope S Rugo, John T Carpenter, Chad Livasy, Lynn Dressler, David Chhieng, Baljit Singh, Carolyn Mies, Joseph Rabban, Yunni-Yi Chen, Dilip Giri, Alfred Au, Nola Hylton.   

Abstract

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer allows individual tumor response to be assessed depending on molecular subtype, and to judge the impact of response to therapy on recurrence-free survival (RFS). The multicenter I-SPY 1 TRIAL evaluated patients with ≥ 3 cm tumors by using early imaging and molecular signatures, with outcomes of pathologic complete response (pCR) and RFS. The current analysis was performed using data from patients who had molecular profiles and did not receive trastuzumab. The various molecular classifiers tested were highly correlated. Categorization of breast cancer by molecular signatures enhanced the ability of pCR to predict improvement in RFS compared to the population as a whole. In multivariate analysis, the molecular signatures that added to the ability of HR and HER2 receptors, clinical stage, and pCR in predicting RFS included 70-gene signature, wound healing signature, p53 mutation signature, and PAM50 risk of recurrence. The low risk signatures were associated with significantly better prognosis, and also identified additional patients with a good prognosis within the no pCR group, primarily in the hormone receptor positive, HER-2 negative subgroup. The I-SPY 1 population is enriched for tumors with a poor prognosis but is still heterogeneous in terms of rates of pCR and RFS. The ability of pCR to predict RFS is better by subset than it is for the whole group. Molecular markers improve prediction of RFS by identifying additional patients with excellent prognosis within the no pCR group.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22198468      PMCID: PMC3332388          DOI: 10.1007/s10549-011-1895-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Breast Cancer Res Treat        ISSN: 0167-6806            Impact factor:   4.872


Introduction

Molecular and genetic studies demonstrate that breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease. Several classifiers are available for distinguishing tumor types based on prognosis and prediction of response to chemotherapy and hormonal therapy [1-3]. Molecular features are associated with substantially different outcomes [4] and with wide variability in response to standard therapies [5, 6]. Symptomatic tumors that tend to be large and palpable on presentation have substantially higher risk of recurrence than tumors detected by screening [7]. For these larger tumors, neoadjuvant, or preoperative, chemotherapy makes it possible to assess response to treatment and may provide insights to the tumor’s biology. Studies examining the degree to which pathologic complete response (pCR) to therapy is predictive of recurrence-free survival (RFS) or overall survival (OS) have given mixed results in relatively unselected populations [8-12]. The I-SPY 1 TRIAL (investigation of serial studies to predict your therapeutic response with imaging and molecular analysis) is a multicenter neoadjuvant study of women with histologically confirmed invasive breast cancers. This report describes associations between molecular markers assessed in pretreatment tumor biopsy samples and response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy at the time of surgery, longer-term disease outcomes, and the relationship between response and RFS.

Methods

Study design and patient selection

The I-SPY 1 TRIAL methods have been described in detail elsewhere [13, 14] and was a collaboration of the American College of Radiology Imaging Network (ACRIN), Cancer and Leukemia Group B (CALGB), and Specialized programs of research excellence (SPORE). All patients gave written consent and had histologically confirmed invasive breast cancers measuring at least 3 cm by clinical examination or imaging, with no evidence of distant metastatic disease. Patients’ clinical stage 1 by exam was eligible if tumor size was >3 cm by imaging. Patients with T4 or inflammatory disease were eligible. The regimen of neoadjuvant chemotherapy included an initial anthracycline-based regimen after which patients either underwent surgery or received a taxane-based regimen prior to surgery. Assays were conducted in nine laboratories. Data was integrated for central accession for analysis using NCICB’s caINTEGRATOR application (https://caintegrator-stage.nci.nih.gov/ispy/index2.jsp)—I-SPY 1 data version dated February 2011.

Standard pathology biomarkers

Hormone and HER2 receptor expression were measured from pretreatment core biopsies. Estrogen and progesterone receptor status were determined by immunohistochemistry (IHC) and calculation of Allred scores [15] at the study sites. HER2 status was determined locally by IHC and/or fluorescence-in situ hybridization assays (FISH). HER2 testing (IHC and FISH) was also performed centrally at the University of North Carolina (UNC) [13, 16]. HER2 status was considered positive if either local or central assays were positive. Ki67 was recorded as low (<10%), medium (10–20%), or high (>20%) and described in detail in supplemental methods [17].

Evaluation of pathologic response

pCR is defined as no invasive tumor present in either breast or axillary lymph nodes. Residual Cancer Burden (RCB) [9] was assessed and included the primary tumor bed area, overall invasive cancer and in situ disease cellularity, number of positive lymph nodes and diameter of largest metastasis. I-SPY 1 TRIAL pathologists were centrally trained; all cases were re-reviewed and scored for RCB as a dichotomous outcome (0, I vs. II, III) and by class (0, I, II, III). Data was recorded using NCI’s Oracle Clinical Remote Data Capture version 4.5 electronic database.

RNA analysis

Tissue samples immediately frozen in OCT were assayed on catalog 44,000 feature Agilent Human oligonucleotide microarrays (catalog # G4112F). Total RNA purification and microarray hybridization were done as previously described [18]. The background was subtracted and Lowess normalized log2 ratio of Cy3 and Cy5 intensity values were calculated [19]. The primary microarray data presented in this study are available in the GEO database under accession number GSE22226. Intrinsic subtype classification was determined by PAM50 50-gene assay as described [18]. The risk of recurrence score (ROR-S) classified patients as having high, medium, or low risk of relapse using predefined cut-points as described previously [19]. The 70-gene prognostic profile was determined using representative probes and data normalization as previously described [20]. This profile classified patients as having high or low risk of relapse using the predefined threshold [20, 21]. Wound healing signature [22] was used to classify tumors as quiescent or activated. A gene-expression signature predictive of p53 genotype [23] was used to classify tumors as p53 wild type or mutated.

DNA analysis

DNA copy number abnormality was assessed by a molecular inversion probe (MIP) platform with focal amplification and high resolution (~10 K bp) as previously described [24-26]. Direct p53 genotyping was performed and mutations were detected by the Roche p53 AmpliChip beta test array [27, 28] and a combination of two approaches described in supplemental methods.

Statistical analysis

The primary endpoint for the trial was RFS according to the STEEP criteria [29]. Time to recurrence was computed from start of treatment; and RFS at 3 years was determined by Kaplan–Meier analysis. Associations of signature classifications with pCR and RFS were assessed by logistic regression and proportional hazards modeling, respectively. Association of pCR with RFS within each risk subset was also tested. These analyses were conducted using JMP Version 8.0.1, SAS Institute Inc. We took HR/HER2 categories to be standard and addressed the ability of other signatures to predict RFS and pCR assuming HR/HER2 category is given. We used multivariate Cox regression of RFS on molecular signature classification, adjusting for the predefined contribution of HR and HER2 (as derived from a Cox model fit of RFS on HR and HER2). Similarly, we employed multivariate logistic regression to evaluate whether other molecular signature classifications were independently predictive pCR when given HR/HER2. These analyses were conducted using Bioconductor R [30]. Differences in rates of pCR and rates of RCB class 0 or 1 within molecular signature-defined subgroups were assessed by χ2 tests. Patient were categorized as low- or high-risk by each molecular signature HR+/HER2− versus others, luminal (A and B) versus others (HER2-enriched, basal, and normal-like) [31], p53 wild type versus mutation, 70-gene prognosis signature low versus high [20], and wound-quiescent versus wound-activated [22], and stage 3 (including inflammatory) versus earlier stage to ensure comparable degrees of freedom. The pairwise concordances of the molecular signatures were compared by Kendall’s rank correlation and Fisher’s exact test. All statistical analyses were performed (CY) and verified by a second statistician (DB) to confirm the results.

Results

Patient characteristics

Between May 2002 and March 2006, 237 patients were enrolled at nine institutions as described previously [13]. As shown in the CONSORT diagram (Fig. 1), 221 patients received an anthracycline as initial neoadjuvant chemotherapy, with 95% receiving a taxane, and were considered evaluable. Of these, 215 (97%) underwent surgical resection and had pathologic data available for analysis; IHC receptors were available for 210 and RCB was available for 196 (93%). We attempted microarrays on all 210 patients but could generate high quality gene-expression arrays for just 149 (Fig. 1). In addition, 171 patients had p53 gene mutation chip data and 153 had copy number variation by MIP arrays. Patients with available gene-expression arrays, who did and did not receive trastuzumab, were not significantly different from the overall cohort (Table 1).
Fig. 1

CONSORT diagram: patients available for analysis. Of the 237 patients enrolled in the study, 16 patients withdrew. Of the 221 patients available for analysis, six decided not to undergo surgery after completing neoadjuvant chemotherapy, leaving 215 patients available for pathologic response analysis

Table 1

Demographics and characteristics of patients in the I-SPY 1 TRIAL

CharacteristicsI-SPY trial evaluable (n = 221)Profiled with agilent microarray (n = 149)Profiled with agilent microarray without any trastuzumab (n = 120)
Age (years)
 Median (range)49 (26–68)48 (27–65)47 (28–65)
Premenopausal48% (106)49% (72)47% (56)
Race
 Caucasian75% (165)76% (114)77% (93)
 African American19% (42)18% (27)18% (21)
 Asian4% (9)5% (7)4% (5)
 Other2% (5)1% (1)1% (1)
Clinical tumor size (cm)
 Median (range)6.0 (0–25)5.5 (0–25)5.5 (0–18)
Tumor longest diameter on baseline MRI (cm)
 Median (range)6.8 (0–18.4)6.5 (0–18.4)6.45 (2.0–16.6)
Clinically node positive at diagnosis65% (143)66% (99)63% (76)
Histologic grade (baseline)
 Low8% (18)7% (10)7% (9)
 Intermediate43% (96)42% (63)40% (48)
 High47% (103)50% (75)52% (62)
 Indeterminate2% (4)1% (1)1% (1)
Clinical stage (baseline)
 I1% (3)2% (3)2% (3)
 IIA19% (43)21% (32)25% (30)
 IIB28% (61)26% (38)26% (31)
 IIIA35% (78)34% (51)33% (40)
 IIIB5% (11)5% (8)7% (8)
 IIIC3% (7)3% (5)2% (2)
 Inflammatory8% (17)7% (11)4% (5)
 Indeterminate<1% (1)1% (1)1% (1)
Hormone receptors (baseline)
 ER-positive56% (124)55% (82)58% (70)
 PR-positive46% (102)44% (66)49% (59)
 HR-positive (ER or PR)59% (130)58% (86)62% (74)
Her-2 positive (baseline)30% (67)30% (45)15% (18)
HR-negative/Her-2 negative (baseline) (triple negative)24% (53)25% (37)30% (36)
Neoadjuvant treatment
 AC only5% (11)3% (4)3% (4)
 AC + T85% (187)87% (129)95% (114)
 AC + T + trastuzumab9% (20)9% (14)
 AC + T + other1% (3)1% (2)1% (2)
Surgery type
 Mastectomy56% (123)57% (84)54% (65)
 Lumpectomy41% (92)40% (60)43% (51)
 No Surgery3% (6)3% (5)3% (4)
Post-operative adjuvant therapy58% (128)56% (84)45% (54)
Any hormonal therapy34% (75)34% (52)38% (46)
Tamoxifen43% (95)44% (61)43% (52)
Aromatase inhibitor12% (27)12% (20)12% (15)
Ovarian suppression or ablation3% (7)3% (6)4% (5)
Trastuzumab16% (35)16% (25)

ER estrogen receptor, PR progesterone receptor, AC anthracycline, T trastuzumab

* All sites performed testing for estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone (PR), and human epithelial growth factor receptor 2 (HER2). Frozen tissue was stored at the University of California, San Francisco; formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded at the University of North Carolina; and blood at CALGB Pathology Central Office at Ohio State University

CONSORT diagram: patients available for analysis. Of the 237 patients enrolled in the study, 16 patients withdrew. Of the 221 patients available for analysis, six decided not to undergo surgery after completing neoadjuvant chemotherapy, leaving 215 patients available for pathologic response analysis Demographics and characteristics of patients in the I-SPY 1 TRIAL ER estrogen receptor, PR progesterone receptor, AC anthracycline, T trastuzumab * All sites performed testing for estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone (PR), and human epithelial growth factor receptor 2 (HER2). Frozen tissue was stored at the University of California, San Francisco; formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded at the University of North Carolina; and blood at CALGB Pathology Central Office at Ohio State University Among the 215 patients, 20 of 67 (30%) HER2+ patients received neoadjuvant trastuzumab, as previously described [13]. Of the 46 HER2+ patients who did not, 17 (36%) received adjuvant trastuzumab. Radiation and hormonal adjuvant therapy were also given at physician discretion as clinically indicated (Table 1). Analysis of RFS was limited to patients who did not receive trastuzumab. Most (65%) patients had clinically or pathologically confirmed axillary lymph node involvement at diagnosis and 90% had tumors of intermediate or high histologic grade. Median follow-up for survival and RFS was 3.9 years.

Early outcomes: residual disease measured at the time of surgical resection

The overall rate of pCR was 27%, and the rate of RCB scores of 0 or I was 37%. As shown in Table 2, the response to therapy varied considerably by marker subset. For the subsets defined by clinical assay (IHC markers), pCR rates were lowest for the HR+/HER2− subset (9%) and highest for the HR−/HER2+ subset (54%). Of the PAM50 intrinsic subtypes, pCR rates were lowest for luminal A (3%) and highest for HER2-enriched population (50%). For Ki67, the pCR rates varied from 5% for the low group to 35% for the high group. Other biomarkers were associated with high rates of pCR, including p53 null mutations by Gene Chip (47%) and amplification at 17q as measured by MIP array (45%).
Table 2

Distribution and response rates by molecular phenotypes and profiles

Distribution and response rates by molecular phenotypes and profiles The rates of pCR and RCB scores of 0 or I for four gene-expression prognostic classifiers—70-gene prognosis signature, ROR-S, wound healing, and p53 mutation signatures—were all low (Table 2). In this population of patients treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy, a minority of patients had good prognosis profiles: 9% were classified as 70-gene low risk, 27% as ROR-S low, 25% as wound healing quiescent, and 49% as p53 wild type. The respective pCR rates were 0, 6, 7, and 9%. Rates of pCR were higher for poor prognosis signatures, including 70-gene high risk (24%), wound healing signature activated (26%), ROR-S moderate risk (17%) and high risk (36%) and p53 mutation predicted by expression profile (34%). Clinical outcomes were better when pCR or an RCB score of 0 or 1 was achieved.

Recurrence-free and OS

Three-year RFS and OS for the entire cohort were 78 and 85%, respectively. When RFS for the population was stratified by molecular signatures, outcomes by subtype differed substantially (Table 2). We dichotomized the classifiers, using low versus medium and high for the analyses shown in Tables 3 and 4. Although developed using heterogeneous methods and populations, dichotomized tumor classifiers and signatures were highly correlated, with concordances generally >70% (Table 3). As shown in Table 4, for the breast cancer subtypes known to be associated with a better outcome (e.g., luminal, 70-gene low risk, wound healing quiescent, and p53 wild type), the RFS was relatively high for patients who did not achieve pCR, but pCR was associated with a better outcome, regardless of subtype. Poor prognosis tumors tend to be more sensitive to chemotherapy, and thus have a higher rate of pCR. The hazard ratio for the prediction of pCR versus not was better within the dichotomized molecular classifications than for the population as a whole. Associations between RFS and pCR differed the most for HR+/HER2− versus not (hazard ratio 0.17, [95% CI 0.04–0.51]), which was also where rates of pCR differed the most (9 vs. 38%). For the dichotomized breast cancer molecular classifiers (Table 4), the difference between highest and lowest rates of pCR varied from 19 to 29%.
Table 3

Correlations among the molecular signatures

Correlation coefficient
Concordance(P value)
p53 wt70-Gene lowLuminalWound-quiescentROR-S low
HR+, HER2−0.440.260.620.340.40
0.720.630.810.680.71
(<0.001)(0.002)(<0.001)(<0.001)(<0.001)
p53 wt0.320.650.550.56
0.590.830.730.74
(<0.001)(<0.001)(<0.001)(<0.001)
70-Gene low0.330.410.54
0.610.820.83
(<0.001)(<0.001)(<0.001)
Luminal0.400.55
0.680.75
(<0.001)(<0.001)
Wound-quiescent0.63
0.86
(<0.001)

HR hormone receptor, wt wild type, ROR-S risk of relapse score. Signatures are shown as dichotomies: HR+/HER2− vs. not, luminal (A and B) vs. the other intrinsic subtypes (HER2 enriched, basal, and normal-like), p53 wild type vs. mutation, 70-gene prognosis low vs. high (only 13 (9%) patients are in the low risk prognosis group), and wound-quiescent vs. wound-activated. Concordance refers to the lower risk subsets

Table 4

Pathological complete response and recurrence-free survival by molecular subtypes

Pathological complete response (pCR)Recurrence-free survival
Rate of pCR (n)Odds ratio (P value)Hazard ratio (95% CI)Hazard ratio, pCR vs. no PCR (95% CI within subgroup)
All patients with surgery27% (215)0.41* (0.18–0.82)
Population without any trastuzumab22% (180)0.23 * (0.06–0.63)
HR+/HER2− (Yes vs. other)Yes: 9% (8/93)

0.15

(<0.001)

0.50*

(0.27–0.89)

Yes: 0.00 (–)
Other: 38% (30/79)Other: 0.17* (0.04–0.51)
p53 (Wt vs. Mut)Wt: 9% (5/58)

0.18

(<0.001)

0.34*

(0.15–0.69)

Wt 0.00 (–)
Mut: 34% (20/58)Mut: 0.22* (0.05–0.65)
70-Gene (low vs. high)Low: 0% (0/11)

0.00

(0.02)

0.00*

(–)

Low: 0.00 (–)
High: 24% (25/105)High: 0.29* (0.07–0.82)
Luminal PAM50 (luminal vs. other)Luminal: 8% (5/61)

0.16

(<0.001)

0.47*

(0.23–0.93)

Luminal: 0.00 (–)
Other: 36% (20/55)Other: 0.26* (0.06–0.79)
Wound healing (quiescent vs. activated)Quiescent: 7% (2/29)

0.21

(0.02)

0.16*

(0.03–0.51)

Quiescent: 0.00 (–)
Activated: 26% (23/87)
Activated: 0.25* (0.06–0.71)
ROR-S (low vs. med/HIGH)Low: 6% (2/32)

0.18

(0.006)

0.22*

(0.05–0.61)

Low: 0.00 (–)
Med/high: 27% (23/84)Med/high: 0.26* (0.06–0.74)

HR hormone receptor, Wt wild type, Mut mutation, ROR-S risk of relapse score, Med medium. * Denotes significant proportional hazard ratio (likelihood ratio P < 0.05). A value of 0.00 indicates that there were no recurrences in this category among patients who had a pCR. The signatures were dichotomized for the purposes of comparison among the signatures. Note that the hazard ratio for the prediction of pCR vs. not is better within the dichotomized molecular classifications than it is for the population as a whole. The greatest difference in RFS is seen with HR+/HER2− vs. not (hazard ratio 0.17, [95% CI 0.04–0.51]) which is also where the greatest difference in the rates of pCR were observed (9% vs. 38%). For the dichotomized breast cancer molecular classifiers, the difference between highest and lowest rates of pCR varied from 19 to 29%

Correlations among the molecular signatures HR hormone receptor, wt wild type, ROR-S risk of relapse score. Signatures are shown as dichotomies: HR+/HER2− vs. not, luminal (A and B) vs. the other intrinsic subtypes (HER2 enriched, basal, and normal-like), p53 wild type vs. mutation, 70-gene prognosis low vs. high (only 13 (9%) patients are in the low risk prognosis group), and wound-quiescent vs. wound-activated. Concordance refers to the lower risk subsets Pathological complete response and recurrence-free survival by molecular subtypes 0.15 (<0.001) 0.50* (0.27–0.89) 0.18 (<0.001) 0.34* (0.15–0.69) 0.00 (0.02) 0.00* (–) 0.16 (<0.001) 0.47* (0.23–0.93) 0.21 (0.02) 0.16* (0.03–0.51) 0.18 (0.006) 0.22* (0.05–0.61) HR hormone receptor, Wt wild type, Mut mutation, ROR-S risk of relapse score, Med medium. * Denotes significant proportional hazard ratio (likelihood ratio P < 0.05). A value of 0.00 indicates that there were no recurrences in this category among patients who had a pCR. The signatures were dichotomized for the purposes of comparison among the signatures. Note that the hazard ratio for the prediction of pCR vs. not is better within the dichotomized molecular classifications than it is for the population as a whole. The greatest difference in RFS is seen with HR+/HER2− vs. not (hazard ratio 0.17, [95% CI 0.04–0.51]) which is also where the greatest difference in the rates of pCR were observed (9% vs. 38%). For the dichotomized breast cancer molecular classifiers, the difference between highest and lowest rates of pCR varied from 19 to 29% In a multivariate model, the factors that added to HR and HER2 in predicting RFS were clinical stage (stage 3 vs. not), wound healing (activated vs. quiescent), ROR-S, and predicted p53 mutation signature (Table 5). The only factor that added to HR and HER2 in predicting pCR was Ki67 low and medium versus high (data not shown). The analysis shown was performed using the dichotomized groupings for the molecular signatures, but the results were qualitatively the same when the original groupings were used (data not shown).
Table 5

Univariate vs. multivariate Cox analyses adjusting for predefined HR/HER2 contribution

Univariate hazard ratio (95% CI)Multivariate hazard ratio adjusting for predefined HR/HER2 contribution (95% CI)
P53 (Wt vs. Mt)

0.33*

(0.16–0.70)

0.46*

(0.22–0.96)

70-Gene (low vs. high)

0.00a

(–)

0.00a

(–)

Luminal PAM50 (luminal vs. other)

0.47*

(0.23–0.94)

0.73

(0.37–1.48)

Wound healing (quiescent vs. activated)

0.16*

(0.04–0.65)

0.20*

(0.05–0.78)

ROR-S (low vs. med/high)

0.22*

(0.07–0.72)

0.29*

(0.09–0.96)

Clinical stage (<stage 3 vs. not)

0.20*

(0.10–0.42)

0.21*

(0.10–0.43)

Ki67 (low/med vs. high)

0.77

(0.42–1.42)

1.14

(0.62–2.10)

Analyses were restricted to the patient subset who did not receive any trastuzumab treatment with known HR/HER2 status, which accounts for the slight discrepancy between the univariate hazard ratios reported here and Table 4. All signatures were dichotomized (if there were more than two categories) as follows: HR+/HER2− vs. others, luminal (A and B) vs. other intrinsic subtypes, p53 wild type vs. mutation, 70-gene prognosis signature low vs. high and wound-quiescent vs.-activated, clinical stage 3 (including inflammatory) vs. earlier stage

* Wald test P < 0.05

aNo events were observed among the 11 patients in the 70-gene low group, which renders the Wald test for significance unreliable

Univariate vs. multivariate Cox analyses adjusting for predefined HR/HER2 contribution 0.33* (0.16–0.70) 0.46* (0.22–0.96) 0.00a (–) 0.00a (–) 0.47* (0.23–0.94) 0.73 (0.37–1.48) 0.16* (0.04–0.65) 0.20* (0.05–0.78) 0.22* (0.07–0.72) 0.29* (0.09–0.96) 0.20* (0.10–0.42) 0.21* (0.10–0.43) 0.77 (0.42–1.42) 1.14 (0.62–2.10) Analyses were restricted to the patient subset who did not receive any trastuzumab treatment with known HR/HER2 status, which accounts for the slight discrepancy between the univariate hazard ratios reported here and Table 4. All signatures were dichotomized (if there were more than two categories) as follows: HR+/HER2− vs. others, luminal (A and B) vs. other intrinsic subtypes, p53 wild type vs. mutation, 70-gene prognosis signature low vs. high and wound-quiescent vs.-activated, clinical stage 3 (including inflammatory) vs. earlier stage * Wald test P < 0.05 aNo events were observed among the 11 patients in the 70-gene low group, which renders the Wald test for significance unreliable When receptor status and pCR were fixed in a multivariate model, most molecular signatures and clinical stage improved the ability to predict RFS (data not shown). The most likely reason is because the molecular classifiers can identify additional patients in the “no pCR” group who have excellent outcomes, the majority of whom are in the HR+/HER2− receptor subtypes. The Kaplan–Meier plots for the hormone receptor positive patients without a pCR, stratified by four of the molecular signatures, and by clinical stage, showed that the low risk classification identified patients with a much better outcome than the high risk classification (Fig. 2).
Fig. 2

Stratification, by molecular classifier, of the hormone receptor positive HER2 negative subgroup that did not achieve a pathologic complete response. The patients in the HR+/HER2− subgroup that did not achieve a pathologic complete response are stratified by the molecular subtypes as shown: a 70-gene prognosis profile (Blue line low risk/gold line high risk); b wound healing signature (Blue line quiescent; gold line activated); c risk of relapse subtype score (ROR-S) (Blue line low risk/Gold line medium and high risk); d p53 predicted mutation (Blue line predicted wild type/Gold line predicted mutation); e clinical stage (Blue line clinical stage 2/Gold line clinical stage 3). Stratification of the “no pCR” HR+/HER2− patient group by molecular signatures and clinical stage

Stratification, by molecular classifier, of the hormone receptor positive HER2 negative subgroup that did not achieve a pathologic complete response. The patients in the HR+/HER2− subgroup that did not achieve a pathologic complete response are stratified by the molecular subtypes as shown: a 70-gene prognosis profile (Blue line low risk/gold line high risk); b wound healing signature (Blue line quiescent; gold line activated); c risk of relapse subtype score (ROR-S) (Blue line low risk/Gold line medium and high risk); d p53 predicted mutation (Blue line predicted wild type/Gold line predicted mutation); e clinical stage (Blue line clinical stage 2/Gold line clinical stage 3). Stratification of the “no pCR” HR+/HER2patient group by molecular signatures and clinical stage A visual representation or unsupervised cluster of the clinical features of the patients in I-SPY 1 who did not receive trastuzumab is shown in Fig. 3. Like Table 3, this figure illustrates the high degree of overlap among clinical variables and molecular signatures. There is a cluster of tumors with many high risk features illustrated by the cluster in red in the lower left, some with pCR and good outcomes and without pCR and poor outcomes, but the molecular features of these tumors are the same and do not appear to provide information to discriminate between good and poor outcomes.
Fig. 3

Heat map by molecular features and outcomes for all patients

Heat map by molecular features and outcomes for all patients

Discussion

The I-SPY 1 collaboration demonstrates that standards for imaging, data and tissue collection can be followed and molecular profiling from small specimens is achievable. Molecular profiles were generated for over 65% of all patients (improving as the trial proceeded), and these patients are representative of the entire data set. Patients who present with large breast tumors, as exemplified by the I-SPY 1 cohort, have biologically poor-risk cancers, as evidenced by 91% having 70-gene high risk profile and the fact that many are interval cancers [32]. Even within this clinically high risk population, response to therapy was heterogeneous. HER2 positivity and HR negativity were associated with a greater rate of pCR, as were four poor prognosis molecular signatures: wound-activated signature, ROR-S high risk, 70-gene poor-risk, and p53 predicted mutation. Patients with good prognosis signatures had a lower chance of short-term (pCR, RCB) response to chemotherapy, but had better long-term (RFS, OS) outcomes, even when their tumors did not respond to therapy. These findings support the emerging consensus that patients with good risk signatures (wound healing quiescent, 70-gene low, and ROR-S low) have low rates of early recurrence in spite of large tumor size. The molecular profiles vary by the percent of the population they classify as low risk, the fraction that respond to therapy, and the outcomes among those without pCR, even though the data set was not sufficiently large to show a statistical difference. The International Breast Cancer Study Group (IBCSG), NSABP, and MD Anderson Cancer Center [33] have found that pCR rates are much higher in patients with HR-negative tumors than in those with HR-positive tumors. These observations are consistent with our results and with adjuvant studies that show patients with HR-negative disease benefit more from chemotherapy [34] than do patients with HR-positive disease. Molecular profiles may provide the opportunity to identify, beyond HR and HER2 status, what might be driving tumor behavior and outcomes. In a multivariate model, when receptor types were fixed, the factors that added to RFS included clinical stage, wound healing signature, ROR-S, and p53 predicted mutation. When pCR was also fixed, most of the dichotomized molecular markers added some additional predictive value, likely because of the ability to identify patients in the “no pCR” group who have excellent outcomes, largely the HR+/HER2− subgroup, though not exclusively. Given that the low proliferative HR+ subset is at risk for late recurrence, longer follow-up and additional studies will be required to validate this observation. Molecular signatures are currently being used to identify low risk patients who are less likely to benefit from chemotherapy regardless of nodal status [35] or in the setting of HR+ node-negative disease [36]. Such patients have been shown to have low rates of response to chemotherapy and very low rates of early recurrence [37]. Confirmation of chemotherapy benefit in molecularly low risk patients will be forthcoming from the TAILORx [38] and MINDACT [39] trials. In the follow-on I-SPY 2 TRIAL, an adaptive-design neoadjuvant trial to test the ability of phase 2 agents in combination with chemotherapy to increase pCR, 70-gene low risk, HR-positive and HER2-negative patients are being excluded from randomization. In I-SPY 1, none of the 11 patients with a 70-gene prognosis profile had a pCR or a recurrence (Fig. 2). In the I-SPY cohort, the wound healing signature identified the largest fraction of low risk patients (based on RFS) of any signature. The genes consistent with an activated wound environment characterize women with poor outcomes, in keeping with increasing evidence that supports targeting the inflammatory pathway in high risk cancers [40] and breast cancer in particular [41, 42]. The activated wound healing signature is associated with poor outcomes across multiple tumor types and may well reflect the importance of the microenvironment in tumor behavior. Although pCR and RCB are very predictive of RFS among the poor prognosis molecular profiles, the profiles do not predict an individual patient’s response to standard chemotherapy. A substantial fraction of tumors with the highest risk features have a complete response to therapy and do well, while others with that same signature have a poor response and poor outcome. Ongoing analysis is focusing on the I-SPY 1 patients who did not have a complete response to therapy and had early recurrence, using the described biomarkers as well as phosphoprotein profiles, to explore targets for future therapeutic intervention. Our study is limited by the short follow-up time. Patients with HR-positive tumors continue to be at risk for recurrence for many years, and early recurrence data may not reflect the overall outcome [34]. However, in this select group of patients where almost all patients had grade 2 or 3 disease, recurrence risk is likely to be concentrated in the first 5 years [43]. The Oxford Overview Analysis of the early breast cancer trials strongly suggests that the benefit of chemotherapy is reflected by distant disease-free survival at 5 years, where the survival curves for patients with chemotherapy versus not initially diverge but are then parallel, so any survival benefit from chemotherapy is likely to be manifest in the first 5 years [44]. The median follow-up period of 3.9 years in the I-SPY cohort should reflect the benefits in HER-positive and triple negative disease, where the risk of recurrence is early [13]. Molecular and biological heterogeneity were substantial even within the high risk group of patients in the I-SPY TRIAL. In this patient cohort, HR and HER2 status were the most predictive of pCR, but the molecular signatures add to the ability of the receptors to predict RFS. The task that remains is to use current and emerging markers to identify optimal biological subsets for new therapeutic agents. Importantly, molecular marker data should be collected routinely in trials so that markers and imaging that are early predictors of outcome can be related to the target endpoint of RFS [45]. The I-SPY 1 database, with its rich resource of genomic and protein expression data, is an important resource to explore emerging and new biomarkers associated with resistance and response to standard therapy. Supplementary material (DOCX 895 kb)
  35 in total

1.  Highly multiplexed molecular inversion probe genotyping: over 10,000 targeted SNPs genotyped in a single tube assay.

Authors:  Paul Hardenbol; Fuli Yu; John Belmont; Jennifer Mackenzie; Carsten Bruckner; Tiffany Brundage; Andrew Boudreau; Steve Chow; Jim Eberle; Ayca Erbilgin; Mat Falkowski; Ron Fitzgerald; Sy Ghose; Oleg Iartchouk; Maneesh Jain; George Karlin-Neumann; Xiuhua Lu; Xin Miao; Bridget Moore; Martin Moorhead; Eugeni Namsaraev; Shiran Pasternak; Eunice Prakash; Karen Tran; Zhiyong Wang; Hywel B Jones; Ronald W Davis; Thomas D Willis; Richard A Gibbs
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2005-02       Impact factor: 9.043

2.  A multigene assay to predict recurrence of tamoxifen-treated, node-negative breast cancer.

Authors:  Soonmyung Paik; Steven Shak; Gong Tang; Chungyeul Kim; Joffre Baker; Maureen Cronin; Frederick L Baehner; Michael G Walker; Drew Watson; Taesung Park; William Hiller; Edwin R Fisher; D Lawrence Wickerham; John Bryant; Norman Wolmark
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2004-12-10       Impact factor: 91.245

3.  Gene expression patterns of breast carcinomas distinguish tumor subclasses with clinical implications.

Authors:  T Sørlie; C M Perou; R Tibshirani; T Aas; S Geisler; H Johnsen; T Hastie; M B Eisen; M van de Rijn; S S Jeffrey; T Thorsen; H Quist; J C Matese; P O Brown; D Botstein; P E Lønning; A L Børresen-Dale
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2001-09-11       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  Clinical course of breast cancer patients with complete pathologic primary tumor and axillary lymph node response to doxorubicin-based neoadjuvant chemotherapy.

Authors:  H M Kuerer; L A Newman; T L Smith; F C Ames; K K Hunt; K Dhingra; R L Theriault; G Singh; S M Binkley; N Sneige; T A Buchholz; M I Ross; M D McNeese; A U Buzdar; G N Hortobagyi; S E Singletary
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  1999-02       Impact factor: 44.544

5.  Prevalence and spectrum of p53 mutations associated with smoking in breast cancer.

Authors:  Kathleen Conway; Sharon N Edmiston; Lisa Cui; S Scott Drouin; Jingzhong Pang; Mei He; Chiu-Kit Tse; Joseph Geradts; Lynn Dressler; Edison T Liu; Robert Millikan; Beth Newman
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2002-04-01       Impact factor: 12.701

6.  Effects of chemotherapy and hormonal therapy for early breast cancer on recurrence and 15-year survival: an overview of the randomised trials.

Authors: 
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2005 May 14-20       Impact factor: 79.321

7.  Measurement of residual breast cancer burden to predict survival after neoadjuvant chemotherapy.

Authors:  W Fraser Symmans; Florentia Peintinger; Christos Hatzis; Radhika Rajan; Henry Kuerer; Vicente Valero; Lina Assad; Anna Poniecka; Bryan Hennessy; Marjorie Green; Aman U Buzdar; S Eva Singletary; Gabriel N Hortobagyi; Lajos Pusztai
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2007-09-04       Impact factor: 44.544

8.  Proposal for standardized definitions for efficacy end points in adjuvant breast cancer trials: the STEEP system.

Authors:  Clifford A Hudis; William E Barlow; Joseph P Costantino; Robert J Gray; Kathleen I Pritchard; Judith-Anne W Chapman; Joseph A Sparano; Sally Hunsberger; Rebecca A Enos; Richard D Gelber; Jo Anne Zujewski
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2007-05-20       Impact factor: 44.544

9.  Validation and clinical utility of a 70-gene prognostic signature for women with node-negative breast cancer.

Authors:  Marc Buyse; Sherene Loi; Laura van't Veer; Giuseppe Viale; Mauro Delorenzi; Annuska M Glas; Mahasti Saghatchian d'Assignies; Jonas Bergh; Rosette Lidereau; Paul Ellis; Adrian Harris; Jan Bogaerts; Patrick Therasse; Arno Floore; Mohamed Amakrane; Fanny Piette; Emiel Rutgers; Christos Sotiriou; Fatima Cardoso; Martine J Piccart
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  2006-09-06       Impact factor: 13.506

10.  Gene expression patterns associated with p53 status in breast cancer.

Authors:  Melissa A Troester; Jason I Herschkowitz; Daniel S Oh; Xiaping He; Katherine A Hoadley; Claire S Barbier; Charles M Perou
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2006-12-06       Impact factor: 4.430

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  161 in total

1.  Pathologic complete response predicts recurrence-free survival more effectively by cancer subset: results from the I-SPY 1 TRIAL--CALGB 150007/150012, ACRIN 6657.

Authors:  Laura J Esserman; Donald A Berry; Angela DeMichele; Lisa Carey; Sarah E Davis; Meredith Buxton; Cliff Hudis; Joe W Gray; Charles Perou; Christina Yau; Chad Livasy; Helen Krontiras; Leslie Montgomery; Debasish Tripathy; Constance Lehman; Minetta C Liu; Olufunmilayo I Olopade; Hope S Rugo; John T Carpenter; Lynn Dressler; David Chhieng; Baljit Singh; Carolyn Mies; Joseph Rabban; Yunn-Yi Chen; Dilip Giri; Laura van 't Veer; Nola Hylton
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2012-05-29       Impact factor: 44.544

2.  Integrated Analysis of RNA and DNA from the Phase III Trial CALGB 40601 Identifies Predictors of Response to Trastuzumab-Based Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in HER2-Positive Breast Cancer.

Authors:  Maki Tanioka; Cheng Fan; Joel S Parker; Katherine A Hoadley; Zhiyuan Hu; Yan Li; Terry M Hyslop; Brandelyn N Pitcher; Matthew G Soloway; Patricia A Spears; Lynn N Henry; Sara Tolaney; Chau T Dang; Ian E Krop; Lyndsay N Harris; Donald A Berry; Elaine R Mardis; Eric P Winer; Clifford A Hudis; Lisa A Carey; Charles M Perou
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2018-07-23       Impact factor: 12.531

3.  Tumor-associated myoepithelial cells promote the invasive progression of ductal carcinoma in situ through activation of TGFβ signaling.

Authors:  Pang-Kuo Lo; Yongshu Zhang; Yuan Yao; Benjamin Wolfson; Justine Yu; Shu-Yan Han; Nadire Duru; Qun Zhou
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2017-05-16       Impact factor: 5.157

Review 4.  Population and target considerations for triple-negative breast cancer clinical trials.

Authors:  Terry Hyslop; Yvonne Michael; Tiffany Avery; Hallgeir Rui
Journal:  Biomark Med       Date:  2013-02       Impact factor: 2.851

Review 5.  TP53 Mutations and Outcomes in Breast Cancer: Reading beyond the Headlines.

Authors:  Ashkan Shahbandi; Hoang D Nguyen; James G Jackson
Journal:  Trends Cancer       Date:  2020-02-05

6.  Combined use of ¹⁸F-FDG PET/CT and MRI for response monitoring of breast cancer during neoadjuvant chemotherapy.

Authors:  Kenneth E Pengel; Bas B Koolen; Claudette E Loo; Wouter V Vogel; Jelle Wesseling; Esther H Lips; Emiel J Th Rutgers; Renato A Valdés Olmos; Marie Jeanne T F D Vrancken Peeters; Sjoerd Rodenhuis; Kenneth G A Gilhuijs
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2014-04-29       Impact factor: 9.236

7.  Identification of distinct basal and luminal subtypes of muscle-invasive bladder cancer with different sensitivities to frontline chemotherapy.

Authors:  Woonyoung Choi; Sima Porten; Seungchan Kim; Daniel Willis; Elizabeth R Plimack; Jean Hoffman-Censits; Beat Roth; Tiewei Cheng; Mai Tran; I-Ling Lee; Jonathan Melquist; Jolanta Bondaruk; Tadeusz Majewski; Shizhen Zhang; Shanna Pretzsch; Keith Baggerly; Arlene Siefker-Radtke; Bogdan Czerniak; Colin P N Dinney; David J McConkey
Journal:  Cancer Cell       Date:  2014-02-10       Impact factor: 31.743

Review 8.  Human epidermal growth factor receptor family-targeted therapies in the treatment of HER2-overexpressing breast cancer.

Authors:  Zeynep Eroglu; Tomoko Tagawa; George Somlo
Journal:  Oncologist       Date:  2014-01-16

Review 9.  Genomic profiling in luminal breast cancer.

Authors:  Oleg Gluz; Daniel Hofmann; Rachel Würstlein; Cornelia Liedtke; Ulrike Nitz; Nadia Harbeck
Journal:  Breast Care (Basel)       Date:  2013-12       Impact factor: 2.860

10.  Predicting Responses to Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in Breast Cancer: ACRIN 6691 Trial of Diffuse Optical Spectroscopic Imaging.

Authors:  Bruce J Tromberg; Zheng Zhang; Anaïs Leproux; Thomas D O'Sullivan; Albert E Cerussi; Philip M Carpenter; Rita S Mehta; Darren Roblyer; Wei Yang; Keith D Paulsen; Brian W Pogue; Shudong Jiang; Peter A Kaufman; Arjun G Yodh; So Hyun Chung; Mitchell Schnall; Bradley S Snyder; Nola Hylton; David A Boas; Stefan A Carp; Steven J Isakoff; David Mankoff
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2016-08-15       Impact factor: 12.701

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