Literature DB >> 26687192

Lymphovascular space invasion and lack of downstaging after neoadjuvant chemotherapy are strong predictors of adverse outcome in young women with locally advanced breast cancer.

Shariq S Khwaja1, Jennifer Ivanovich2, Todd A DeWees1, Laura Ochoa1, Daniel F Mullen1, Maria Thomas1, Julie A Margenthaler2, Amy Cyr2, Michael Naughton3, Souzan Sanati4, Timothy J Eberlein2, William E Gillanders2, Rebecca L Aft2, Jacqueline E Zoberi1, Imran Zoberi1.   

Abstract

Younger age diagnosis of breast cancer is a predictor of adverse outcome. Here, we evaluate prognostic factors in young women with locally advanced breast cancer (LABC). We present a retrospective review of 104 patients younger than 40 years with LABC treated with surgery, radiotherapy (RT), and chemotherapy from 2003 to 2014. Patient-, tumor-, and treatment-related factors important for overall survival (OS), local/regional recurrence (LRR), distant metastasis (DM), and recurrence-free survival (RFS) were evaluated. Mean age at diagnosis was 34 years (23-39 years) with a median follow-up of 47 months (8-138 months). Breast-conserving surgery was performed in 27%. Axillary lymph node dissection was performed in 85%. Sixty percent of patients received neoadjuvant chemotherapy with 19% achieving pathologic complete response (pCR), and 61% downstaged. Lymph node positivity was present in 91% and lymphovascular space invasion (LVSI) in 35%. Thirty-two percent of patients had triple negative tumors (TN, ER-/PR-/HER2 nonamplified). Four-year OS and RFS was 84% and 71%, respectively. Factors associated with worse OS on multivariate analysis include TN status, LVSI, and number of positive lymph nodes. LVSI was also associated with DM and LRR, as well as worse RFS. Downstaging was associated with improved 4 year RFS in patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy (74% vs. 38%, P = 0.002). With high risks of recurrence and inferior OS compared to older women, breast cancer in young women can be difficult to treat. Among additional factors, presence of LVSI and lack of downstaging portends a particularly worse prognosis.
© 2015 The Authors. Cancer Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Breast cancer; LVSI; locally advanced; neoadjuvant chemotherapy; young women

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26687192      PMCID: PMC4735787          DOI: 10.1002/cam4.586

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Med        ISSN: 2045-7634            Impact factor:   4.452


Introduction

In 2015, an estimated 231,840 new cases of invasive breast cancer was diagnosed among women, with approximately 40,000 women expected to have died from their disease 1. Of the total number of new cases, an estimated 1.8% will be in patients under the age of 35. Of the estimated deaths in 2015, approximately 1.0% was estimated in these young women. Cancer is the leading cause of death in women 20–39 years of age, with breast cancer being the most common cancer type in this age group 2. Although the exact definition of “young” women with breast cancer is debatable as evidenced by the variability in defining this population in breast cancer reviews, majority of series suggest a worse prognosis in young women compared with older women 3. Most published series on breast cancer in young women have included both early‐stage disease with the more aggressive locally advanced breast cancer (LABC). LABC refers to most advanced‐stage nonmetastatic breast tumors 4 and may be operationally defined as tumors greater than 5 cm or that involve the skin or chest wall, or involvement of lymph nodes. Thus, all stage IIIA‐C and stage IIB (T2N1, T3N0) disease would be classified as LABC. Treatment of LABC requires a multimodal approach with a combination of systemic chemotherapy, surgery, and radiation therapy in order to achieve optimal chance of cure. Young women with breast cancer are more likely to have larger tumors and nodal involvement 5, 6. Several factors have been linked to the poor prognosis associated with breast cancer in young women, including large tumor size, higher tumor grade, mitotic rate, lymphovascular space invasion (LVSI), increased expression of HER2, and lower estrogen and progesterone receptor expression 7, 8. Here, we present our institutional experience in women younger than 40 years of age diagnosed with LABC (T3‐4N0, T1‐4N1) who had radiation as a component of their treatment. Young women with LABC are invariably treated with surgery, radiation therapy, chemotherapy and/or hormonal therapy. These patients are often faced with personal, family, professional, and quality‐of‐life issues that further complicate treatment decision‐making. Many have argued for more tailored therapies in this population arguing that reliance on information from older women will not be adequate to treat younger patients 9. Few studies have exclusively evaluated factors important for survival in young women diagnosed with LABC. We present one of the few series exclusively addressing patient‐, tumor‐, and treatment‐related factors important for overall survival (OS) and recurrence‐free survival (RFS) in this young population with locally advanced disease.

Materials and Methods

The source for this analysis was de‐identified data from an IRB‐approved prospective registry. From this registry, we conducted a retrospective chart‐based review of 104 breast cancer patients less than 40 years of age treated with a combination of surgery, comprehensive radiotherapy (RT) +/− chemotherapy from 2003 to 2014. Patient‐, tumor‐, and treatment‐specific factors that were hypothesized to predict OS, local/regional recurrence (LRR), distant metastasis (DM), or RFS were evaluated (Table 1). RFS was defined as freedom from local/regional and distant failure.
Table 1

Patient and treatment characteristics (n = 104)

N (%)
Mean age at diagnosis (years)34.5 (23–39)
Race
Caucasian6461.5
African American3129.8
Other98.6
Family history
Any positive family history4543.3
1st degree relative18/4540.0
2nd/3rd degree relative25/4555.6
Distant relative (>3rd degree)2/454.4
BRCA1/BRCA 2 gene testing
Testing performed5754.8
Mutation identified1018.5
No mutation identified4477.2
Variant (VUS) identified35.6
No testing performed4745.2
Surgery
BCT2826.9
Unilateral Mastectomy2826.9
Bilateral Mastectomy4846.2
Positive/Close Margin1716.4
ALND8884.6
Chemotherapy
Neoadjuvant only6259.6
Neoadjuvant+adjuvant2625.0
Pathologic CR12/6219.4
Downstaged38/6261.3
Adjuvant only3432.7
Hormonal therapy
Neoadjuvant65.8
Adjuvant5351.0
Radiation therapy
Median dose (cGy)5040
Boost received5351.0
Comprehensive RT9995.2
Conventional radiation4139.4
Helical IMRT1211.5
Nonhelical IMRT5149.0

BCT, breast conserving therapy; IMRT, intensity modulated radiation therapy; ALND, axillary lymph node dissection; CR, complete response; VUS, variant of unknown significance.

Patient and treatment characteristics (n = 104) BCT, breast conserving therapy; IMRT, intensity modulated radiation therapy; ALND, axillary lymph node dissection; CR, complete response; VUS, variant of unknown significance. Only patients with LABC were included. LABC was operationally defined as any node positive or T3‐4N0 cancer. For patients receiving neoadjuvant therapy, pretreatment clinical stage was utilized. All patients clinically node negative had an axillary ultrasound (US) and subsequent fine needle aspiration (FNA) or sentinel lymph node biopsy performed for suspicious nodes. All clinically node positive patients had FNA confirmation. T3N0 patients who received mastectomy followed by postmastectomy radiation treatment had one or more of high risk features warranting radiation treatment, which included LVSI, close (<2 mm) or positive margin, and/or triple negative (TN) receptor status. Patient‐specific factors recorded include: age at diagnosis, race, BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene mutation status, and family history of breast cancer. Tumor‐specific factors recorded include biomarker status (estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), and HER2), multifocality, tumor size, number of lymph nodes involved with disease (LN), extranodal extension (ENE), perineural invasion (PNI), and LVSI. LVSI was documented as either present or absent. LVSI was not consistently noted as extensive or focal in pathology reports. Treatment‐specific factors recorded include type of surgery (breast conserving surgery versus mastectomy, type of axillary surgery), type of neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant systemic therapy, achievement of pathologic complete response (pCR), downstaging, radiation technique, dose, and whether a boost to the scar was given. Downstaging was defined as any decrease in T stage or N stage after neoadjuvant therapy. Patients with a decrease in N stage but with an increase in T stage (and vice versa) were not classified as downstaged. Here pCR was defined as no evidence of in situ or invasive disease after neoadjuvant therapy. All patients received comprehensive radiation therapy, which included coverage of the breast or chest wall, axillary, supraclavicular and internal mammary lymph nodes, except patients with T3N0 cancers, who received chest wall radiation alone. Univariate and multivariate COX regression was performed for OS, LR, DM, and RFS. Survival was assessed by Kaplan–Meier analyses utilizing the log‐rank test for statistical significance. A P‐value <0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Results

Patient and treatment characteristics

Patient and treatment characteristics are outlined in Table 1. Median follow‐up time was 47 months (range 8–138 months). The mean age at diagnosis was 34.5 years (range 23–39 years). The majority of patients were Caucasian (61.5%) or African American (29.8%). Fifty‐seven (54.8%) women underwent BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene testing. Of those tested, 10 women (18.5%) had a mutation and three women had a variant of unknown clinical significance (VUS). The remaining women tested negative. Forty‐five patients (43.3%) were documented to have any positive family history of breast cancer, with 18 patients (40.0%) having a documented first degree relative and 25 patients (55.6% with a second/third degree relative. Twenty‐eight patients (26.9%) had breast‐conserving surgery, 28 patients (26.9%) had a unilateral mastectomy, and 48 patients (46.2%) had bilateral mastectomies. Surgery included an axillary lymph node dissection in 88 patients (84.6%) with a median number of lymph nodes (LN) removed of 15 nodes (interquartile range 10–18). The remaining patients had a sentinel lymph node excision. A close (<2 mm) or positive margin was observed in 17 patients (16.4%), 6 occurring after breast‐conservation, and the remaining 11 after mastectomy. A total of 62 patients (59.6%) were administered neoadjuvant treatment (chemotherapy with or without targeted therapy) with 12 of these patients (19.4%) showing a pathologic complete response to treatment. A total of 38 of the 62 patients (61.3%) had downstaging of their tumors. Thirty‐four patients (32.7%) received adjuvant chemotherapy alone, whereas 26 patients (25.0%) received both neoadjuvant and adjuvant chemotherapy. Various chemotherapy regimens were utilized. The most common was AC plus or minus T (doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, taxol), FEC (5‐fluoruracil, epirubicin, cyclophosphamide), and TAC (docetaxel, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide). Select patients also received Avastin (bevacizumab) or Herceptin (trastuzumab). A total of six patients (5.9%) received neoadjuvant hormonal therapy with an aromatase inhibitor or tamoxifen. Fifty‐three patients (51.0%) received adjuvant hormonal therapy with the most common treatment being tamoxifen (n = 40, 74.1%). All patients received adjuvant radiation therapy, which was delivered using conventional fields in 41 patients (39.4%), helical intensity modulated radiation therapy (H‐IMRT) in 12 patients (11.4%), and nonhelical IMRT in 51 patients (49.0%), for which simulation and treatment techniques have been described previously 10. The median dose was 5040 cGy. The vast majority of patients received comprehensive radiotherapy (n = 99, 95.2%) comprising chest wall and regional nodal volume radiation, including the internal mammary nodes. The remaining five patients received chest wall radiation alone. These patients had T3N0 disease. Fifty‐three patients (51.0%) received a boost, with a median boost dose of 1000 cGy (range 600–2000 cGy).

Tumor characteristics

Tumor‐specific characteristics are outlined in Table 2. The mean tumor size was 3.2 cm. Estrogen‐receptor positive (ER+)/Progesterone‐receptor positive (PR+)/HER2 nonamplified tumors comprised 34%, ER−/PR−/HER2 amplified tumors 14%, ER+/PR+/HER2 amplified 11% and triple negative (TN, ER−/PR−/HER2 nonamplified) 32%. The overwhelming majority (96.2%) of tumors were invasive ductal carcinomas (IDC). Majority of tumors were grade III (n = 54, 60.7%) or grade II (n = 27, 30.3%). Tumors were largely stage II (n = 40, 38.5%) or stage III (n = 63, 60.6%). A clinical or pathologic T4 was observed in 14 patients (13.5%). The overwhelming majority of patients were LN positive (n = 95, 91.3%). Pathologic LN positivity, as assessed by sentinel LN biopsy or axillary LN dissection, was present in 76 patients (73.1%). Fourteen patients (13.3%) were pathologically LN negative, but were observed to have pathologic LN positivity on pretreatment ultrasound FNA. LVSI was seen in 36 patients (34.6%), ENE was seen in 27 patients (26.0%), and PNI in 6 patients (5.8%). Multifocal disease was seen in 20 patients (19.2%).
Table 2

Tumor characteristics

N % (of total)
Mean size (cm) (range in cm)3.2 (0.2–23.0)
Luminal A (ER+/PR+/HER2 nonamp G1‐2)2019.2
Luminal B (ER+/PR+/HER2 nonamp G3)1514.4
HER2 (ER−/PR−/HER2 amp)1413.5
Luminal‐HER2 (ER+/PR+/HER2 amp)1110.6
Triple Negative (ER−/PR−/HER2 nonamp)3331.7
Histology
Invasive ductal10196.2
Invasive lobular21.9
Pathologic grade
I87.7
II2726.0
III5351.0
Stage (clinical or pathologic)
II4038.5
III6360.6
Clinical or pathologic T41413.5
Lymph node positive9591.3
Path. positive LN (SLNB or AXLND)7673.1
Path. LN negative but LN+ at US1413.3
Path. LN negative and LN− at US54.8
LVSI3634.6
ENE2726.0
PNI65.8
Multifocal2019.2

LN, lymph nodes; LVSI, lymphovascular space invasion; ENE, extranodal extension; PNI, perineural invasion, ER, estrogen receptor; PR, progresterone receptor; amp, amplified.

Tumor characteristics LN, lymph nodes; LVSI, lymphovascular space invasion; ENE, extranodal extension; PNI, perineural invasion, ER, estrogen receptor; PR, progresterone receptor; amp, amplified.

Events

Table 3 outlines the number of deaths, LRRs, and sites of metastatic disease. With a median follow‐up of 47 months (range 8–138 months), 16 patients (15.4%) died of their disease. Twelve patients had local recurrences either in‐breast, nodal, or chest wall (11.4%). Only 1 of 12 patients had an in‐breast recurrence only. Four patients had nodal and chest wall recurrences. Of the remaining LRRs, 6 patients had a nodal only recurrence and one patient had both a nodal and in‐breast recurrence. All 12 of these patients eventually developed distant metastatic disease. In total, 29 patients (27.9%) had distant recurrences. Some patients had more than one site involved. Most common sites were brain, bone, lung, and liver. Recurrences were treated with chemotherapy only (n = 10), radiotherapy only (n = 7), or combination chemotherapy and radiotherapy (n = 10). The remaining two patients chose pain control with oral analgesics. To date there have been no treatment‐induced malignancies.
Table 3

Summary of events (n = 104 patients)

N (%)
Median follow‐up in months (range)47 (8–138)
Number of deaths1615.4
Patients with recurrence2927.9
Local/regional recurrences
Total1211.4
In‐breast only1/128.3
Nodal only6/1250.0
Nodal and in‐breast1/128.3
Nodal and chest wall4/1233.3
Patients with distant recurrences
Total2927.9
Brain11/2937.9
Bone16/2955.2
Lung12/2941.3
Liver14/2948.3
Other10/2934.5
Summary of events (n = 104 patients) Univariate and multivariate (MVA) Cox regressions were performed on the patient‐, tumor‐, and treatment‐specific factors (Table 4). Univariate analysis revealed that ER positivity was associated with better OS, whereas LVSI, number of positive LN, and TN were associated with poor OS (P < 0.05). LVSI, number of positive LN, TN status, and ER positivity continued to show significance on MVA. Similar analyses were performed for local/regional failure‐free survival (LRRF), DM‐free survival, and RFS. Univariate analysis for LRRF revealed that African American race, number of positive LN, and LVSI were associated with poor LRRF, whereas downstaging was associated with better LRRF (P < 0.05). Number of positive LN, African American race, and LVSI remained significant on MVA. Factors associated with better DM‐free survival on univariate analysis included downstaging and positive family history of breast cancer, whereas LVSI, number of positive LN, and African American race were associated with poor DM‐free survival (P < 0.05). On MVA, LVSI, and downstaging remained significant in the model. For RFS, univariate results were similar to those in the DM‐free survival analysis, with LVSI and downstaging remaining significant on MVA (P < 0.05). In the patient cohort receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy, LVSI and downstaging were significant factors for both RFS and DM‐free survival. For these patients, number of positive LN was also a significant factor for LRRF on MVA (P < 0.014).
Table 4

Univariate/multivariate COX regression

ParameterUnivariateMultivariate
HR95% CI P‐valueHR95% CI P‐value
Overall survival
Triple negative2.8671.073–7.6620.0366.4212.009–20.5250.002
LVSI3.6191.312–9.9830.0133.3241.190–9.2820.022
Number of positive LN's1.1341.041–1.2350.0041.1921.077–1.3180.001
ER‐positive0.3440.119–0.9920.0480.1590.050–0.5080.002
Any recurrence
LVSI2.6161.252–5.4640.0112.4521.165–5.1600.018
Downstaged0.2680.108–0.6650.0050.3400.128–0.9070.031
African‐American race2.3831.143–4.9700.021
Positive family history0.4280.183–1.0040.051
Number of positive LN's1.0981.017–1.1870.018
Locoregional recurrence
African‐American Race3.4791.103–10.9730.0334.2701.279–14.2500.018
LVSI3.8211.113–13.1220.0334.2831.141–16.0720.031
Number of Positive LN's1.1941.090–1.307<0.0011.2031.093–1.325<0.001
Downstaged0.1790.034–0.9380.042
Distant metastasis
LVSI2.5251.210–5.2680.0142.4411.161–5.1310.019
Downstaged0.2850.116–0.7040.0060.3400.128–0.9070.031
African‐American race2.3741.138–4.9510.021
Positive family history0.4240.181–0.9940.048
Number of positive LN's1.0951.015–1.1810.019

TN, triple negative; ALND, axillary lymph node dissection; LVSI, lymphovascular space invasion; LN, lymph nodes; ER, estrogen receptor; HR, hazard ratio (HR > 1 represents increased likelihood of having event).

Univariate/multivariate COX regression TN, triple negative; ALND, axillary lymph node dissection; LVSI, lymphovascular space invasion; LN, lymph nodes; ER, estrogen receptor; HR, hazard ratio (HR > 1 represents increased likelihood of having event). Table 5 presents survival statistics for OS, RFS, LRRF, and DM – free survival. OS at 2 and 4 years was 95% and 84%, respectively. RFS at 2 and 4 years was 86% and 71%, respectively. LRRF at 2 and 4 years was 95% and 87%, respectively. DM‐free survival at 2 and 4 years was 87% and 72%, respectively. Kaplan–Meier survival curves were generated using LVSI status for OS and RFS (Fig. 1A and B, respectively). Four‐year OS for patients that had no evidence of LVSI was 92%, whereas patients with documented LVSI had a 70% 4‐year OS (P = 0.009 on log‐rank). Similarly, 4‐year RFS for patients without LVSI was 82% as opposed to 52% in patients with LVSI (P = 0.010 on log‐rank). The impact of downstaging on OS and RFS in patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy is graphically represented in Figure 1C and D, respectively. Patients successfully downstaged after neoadjuvant chemotherapy had improved RFS (P = 0.002), but this did not affect their OS (P = 0.117).
Table 5

Impact of LVSI on outcomes

Survival2 years (%)4 years (%) P‐value
Overall survival95840.009
With LVSI9170
Without LVSI9692
Recurrence‐free survival (RFS)86710.010
With LVSI8052
Without LVSI8882
Locoregional RFS95870.022
With LVSI9173
Without LVSI9795
Distant metastasis‐free survival87720.010
With LVSI8654
Without LVSI8882

P‐values calculated using Log‐rank (Mantel‐Cox). LVSI, lymphovascular space invasion.

Figure 1

Overall survival and recurrence‐free survival (RFS). Kaplan–Meier survival plots of (A) overall survival (OS) with and without lymphovascular space invasion (LVSI), (B) RFS with and without LVSI, (C) OS in patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy stratified by downstaging, (D) RFS in patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy stratified by downstaging. P‐values represent results of log‐rank analysis.

Impact of LVSI on outcomes P‐values calculated using Log‐rank (Mantel‐Cox). LVSI, lymphovascular space invasion. Overall survival and recurrence‐free survival (RFS). Kaplan–Meier survival plots of (A) overall survival (OS) with and without lymphovascular space invasion (LVSI), (B) RFS with and without LVSI, (C) OS in patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy stratified by downstaging, (D) RFS in patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy stratified by downstaging. P‐values represent results of log‐rank analysis.

Discussion

The present series represents one of the few studies exploring factors associated with survival exclusively in young women with LABC. Younger age has been shown in multiple retrospective studies and subset analyses of larger randomized trials to be a powerful adverse prognostic indicator of LRR and distant metastases in breast cancer patients. Many of these randomized trials, however, did not have adequate representation of women in this young age group. Investigators in the UK recently published a prospective study (The Prospective Study of Outcomes in Sporadic and Hereditary Breast CancerPOSH) designed to investigate factors affecting prognosis in this group 11. As one of the few prospective studies, POSH highlights the relative poor prognosis in women less than 40 years, with an OS at 5 years of 82% and DM rate of 24%. Previous retrospective analyses and the aforementioned prospective trial in young women have included early stage breast cancer patients 8, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18. With the understanding that young women tend to present with more advanced disease, our goal in limiting this study to age less than 40 with LABC was to remove age as a variable and focus solely on those patients who presented with locally advanced disease. In presenting a pooled analysis of four European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) clinical trials, van der Hage et al. reveal tumor size, nodal status, and molecular subtype as independent prognostic factors for OS in young women with breast cancer, with only molecular subtype as a prognostic factor for OS in the node negative group 19. In our study of predominantly node positive patients, TN status and presence of LVSI were shown on multivariate analysis to be predictive of OS. Number of positive lymph nodes also correlated with worse OS. Patients presenting with LVSI had an absolute decrease in survival at 4 years of over 20%. Type of surgery (breast conserving therapy [BCT] vs mastectomy) in this young age group did not affect any of the outcomes measured. This is consistent with a recently published meta‐analysis summarizing 6 studies comparing OS between patients receiving BCT vs mastectomy in patients less than 40 years 20. In terms of LRR‐free survival, distant‐metastasis free‐survival and RFS, presence of LVSI was again highlighted as a variable significant on multivariate analysis. Our data demonstrate a DM‐free survival of only 54% at 4 years in young women presenting with LVSI. In a recent study of early stage breast cancer, Freedman et al. studied the prognostic importance of LVSI after conservative surgery and radiation 21. Although 5‐ and 10‐year locoregional RFS and OS were decreased for patients with LVSI in their cohort of patients with a median age around 55, LVSI was not found to be an independent predictor of local/regional failure or decreased survival on multivariate analysis. In our cohort of LABC, young women with LVSI were more likely to recur, having a RFS at four years of approximately 52% compared to 82% for young women without evidence of LVSI. Huang et al. investigated predictors of LRR in patients with a median age of 50 with LABC treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy, mastectomy, and radiotherapy, revealing factors on multivariate analysis that independently predicted for LRR: skin/nipple involvement, supraclavicular disease, extracapsular extension, and estrogen‐receptor negative disease 22. Our series reveals a number of positive LN's, African American race, and presence of LVSI as significant factors for LRR. There have been significant efforts to elucidate an underlying biological explanation as to why young women have a more aggressive course compared to elderly women. Recent gene expression profiling studies have showed that young women have a higher probability of PI3K, Myc, and B‐catenin deregulation and lower mRNA levels of ER and progesterone receptor, but higher levels of HER2 and epidermal growth factor receptor 23. Azim et al. evaluated whether previously published proliferation, stroma, and immune‐related gene signatures were predictive of prognosis in young women 24. Their analyses suggested that breast cancer in young women is enriched with processes related to mammary stem cells (e.g., RANKL, c‐kit, luminal progenitors) and growth factor signaling. These studies and others like it have successfully identified certain signaling pathways and gene expression signatures associated with breast cancer in young women, suggesting that breast cancer in young women is a unique disease entity compared to breast cancer arising in the older population. It is becoming clear that achieving a pathologic complete response (pCR) prior to surgery improves disease‐free survival 25. Loibl and colleagues of the German Breast Group presented results of a German meta‐analysis at the 2012 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. Interestingly, they found that the pathologic complete response was higher in young women compared to older women (23% vs. 13.5%). Furthermore, young women who did not achieve a pCR had inferior disease‐free and local RFS compared to those women that achieved pCR. In our series, patients with TN disease were more likely to achieve a pCR compared to non‐TN patients (P = 0.04), consistent with a study from MD Anderson 26. Cortazar and colleagues in a recent Lancet article showed that patients with pCR had improved survival, but the utility of pCR as a surrogate endpoint for survival was not validated 27. A recent meta‐analysis of 29 neoadjuvant trials reached the conclusion that use of pCR as a surrogate for outcomes is not justified 28. Regardless of the utility in using pCR to predict outcomes, the unique biology of breast cancer in young women may render their tumors more responsive to neoadjuvant treatment. In our cohort of young women with LABC, 12 patients (19.4%) achieved a pCR and 38 patients (61.3%) were downstaged, which was a statistically significant factor for DM‐free survival and RFS. However, the high rate of pCR/downstaging may be related to the high proportion of triple negative patients in this series. Moreover, downstaging after neoadjuvant chemotherapy was associated with RFS but not OS, likely due to short follow‐up and salvage therapy in ER+ patients. There are inherent limitations associated with a single institution retrospective analysis. It is understood that treatment regimens at institutions can vary significantly. It should be emphasized that this series only included patients that had radiotherapy as a required component of management. However, LABC in young women is invariably treated with some combination of surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy. This study highlights two already known and established poor prognostic indicators, namely LVSI and poor response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy, in the overall management of these young women. Given an inferior prognosis compared to older women and evidence of a biologically distinct entity, there appears to be a need for clinical trials geared specifically to young women with breast cancer. Prospectively designed collaborations to specifically investigate novel therapeutic approaches in young women with breast cancer are required.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
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8.  Prospective observational study of breast cancer treatment outcomes for UK women aged 18-40 years at diagnosis: the POSH study.

Authors:  Ellen Copson; Bryony Eccles; Tom Maishman; Sue Gerty; Louise Stanton; Ramsey I Cutress; Douglas G Altman; Lorraine Durcan; Peter Simmonds; Gill Lawrence; Louise Jones; Judith Bliss; Diana Eccles
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  2013-05-30       Impact factor: 13.506

Review 9.  Breast cancer before age 40 years.

Authors:  Carey K Anders; Rebecca Johnson; Jennifer Litton; Marianne Phillips; Archie Bleyer
Journal:  Semin Oncol       Date:  2009-06       Impact factor: 4.929

10.  Helical tomotherapy planning for left-sided breast cancer patients with positive lymph nodes: comparison to conventional multiport breast technique.

Authors:  S Murty Goddu; Summer Chaudhari; Maria Mamalui-Hunter; Olga L Pechenaya; David Pratt; Sasa Mutic; Imran Zoberi; Sam Jeswani; Simon N Powell; Daniel A Low
Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys       Date:  2009-03-15       Impact factor: 7.038

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  2 in total

1.  Relationship between lymphovascular invasion and clinicopathological features of papillary thyroid carcinoma.

Authors:  Atakan Sezer; Mehmet Celik; Buket Yilmaz Bulbul; Nuray Can; Ebru Tastekin; Semra Ayturk; Funda Ustun; Sibel Guldiken; Necdet Sut
Journal:  Bosn J Basic Med Sci       Date:  2017-05-20       Impact factor: 3.363

2.  Lymphovascular space invasion and lack of downstaging after neoadjuvant chemotherapy are strong predictors of adverse outcome in young women with locally advanced breast cancer.

Authors:  Shariq S Khwaja; Jennifer Ivanovich; Todd A DeWees; Laura Ochoa; Daniel F Mullen; Maria Thomas; Julie A Margenthaler; Amy Cyr; Michael Naughton; Souzan Sanati; Timothy J Eberlein; William E Gillanders; Rebecca L Aft; Jacqueline E Zoberi; Imran Zoberi
Journal:  Cancer Med       Date:  2015-12-21       Impact factor: 4.452

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