| Literature DB >> 22198468 |
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.Entities:
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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
Fig. 1CONSORT 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
| Characteristics | I-SPY trial evaluable ( | Profiled with agilent microarray ( | Profiled with agilent microarray without any trastuzumab ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | |||
| Median (range) | 49 (26–68) | 48 (27–65) | 47 (28–65) |
| Premenopausal | 48% (106) | 49% (72) | 47% (56) |
| Race | |||
| Caucasian | 75% (165) | 76% (114) | 77% (93) |
| African American | 19% (42) | 18% (27) | 18% (21) |
| Asian | 4% (9) | 5% (7) | 4% (5) |
| Other | 2% (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 diagnosis | 65% (143) | 66% (99) | 63% (76) |
| Histologic grade (baseline) | |||
| Low | 8% (18) | 7% (10) | 7% (9) |
| Intermediate | 43% (96) | 42% (63) | 40% (48) |
| High | 47% (103) | 50% (75) | 52% (62) |
| Indeterminate | 2% (4) | 1% (1) | 1% (1) |
| Clinical stage (baseline) | |||
| I | 1% (3) | 2% (3) | 2% (3) |
| IIA | 19% (43) | 21% (32) | 25% (30) |
| IIB | 28% (61) | 26% (38) | 26% (31) |
| IIIA | 35% (78) | 34% (51) | 33% (40) |
| IIIB | 5% (11) | 5% (8) | 7% (8) |
| IIIC | 3% (7) | 3% (5) | 2% (2) |
| Inflammatory | 8% (17) | 7% (11) | 4% (5) |
| Indeterminate | <1% (1) | 1% (1) | 1% (1) |
| Hormone receptors (baseline) | |||
| ER-positive | 56% (124) | 55% (82) | 58% (70) |
| PR-positive | 46% (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 only | 5% (11) | 3% (4) | 3% (4) |
| AC + T | 85% (187) | 87% (129) | 95% (114) |
| AC + T + trastuzumab | 9% (20) | 9% (14) | – |
| AC + T + other | 1% (3) | 1% (2) | 1% (2) |
| Surgery type | |||
| Mastectomy | 56% (123) | 57% (84) | 54% (65) |
| Lumpectomy | 41% (92) | 40% (60) | 43% (51) |
| No Surgery | 3% (6) | 3% (5) | 3% (4) |
| Post-operative adjuvant therapy | 58% (128) | 56% (84) | 45% (54) |
| Any hormonal therapy | 34% (75) | 34% (52) | 38% (46) |
| Tamoxifen | 43% (95) | 44% (61) | 43% (52) |
| Aromatase inhibitor | 12% (27) | 12% (20) | 12% (15) |
| Ovarian suppression or ablation | 3% (7) | 3% (6) | 4% (5) |
| Trastuzumab | 16% (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
Distribution and response rates by molecular phenotypes and profiles
Correlations among the molecular signatures
| Correlation coefficient | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Concordance | |||||
| p53 wt | 70-Gene low | Luminal | Wound-quiescent | ROR-S low | |
| HR+, HER2− | 0.44 | 0.26 | 0.62 | 0.34 | 0.40 |
| 0.72 | 0.63 | 0.81 | 0.68 | 0.71 | |
| (<0.001) | (0.002) | (<0.001) | (<0.001) | (<0.001) | |
| p53 wt | ⇓ | 0.32 | 0.65 | 0.55 | 0.56 |
| ⇒ | 0.59 | 0.83 | 0.73 | 0.74 | |
| (<0.001) | (<0.001) | (<0.001) | (<0.001) | ||
| 70-Gene low | ⇓ | 0.33 | 0.41 | 0.54 | |
| ⇒ | 0.61 | 0.82 | 0.83 | ||
| (<0.001) | (<0.001) | (<0.001) | |||
| Luminal | ⇓ | 0.40 | 0.55 | ||
| ⇒ | 0.68 | 0.75 | |||
| (<0.001) | (<0.001) | ||||
| Wound-quiescent | ⇓ | 0.63 | |||
| ⇒ | 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
Pathological complete response and recurrence-free survival by molecular subtypes
| Pathological complete response (pCR) | Recurrence-free survival | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rate of pCR ( | Odds ratio ( | Hazard ratio (95% CI) | Hazard ratio, pCR vs. no PCR (95% CI within subgroup) | |
| All patients with surgery | 27% (215) | – | – | 0.41* (0.18–0.82) |
| Population without any trastuzumab | 22% (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%
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
Fig. 2Stratification, 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
Fig. 3Heat map by molecular features and outcomes for all patients