BACKGROUND: According to current guidelines, endocrine therapy (ET) is recommended as first-line treatment of luminal-like metastatic breast cancer (MBC), whereas chemotherapy (CT) should be considered in presence of life-threatening disease. In daily practice, CT is often used outside of this clinical circumstance. Factors influencing first-line choice and the relative impact on outcome are unknown. METHODS: A consecutive series of luminal-like HER2-negative MBC patients treated from 2004 to 2014 was analyzed to test the association of disease- and patient-related factors with the choice of first-line treatment (ET vs. CT). A propensity score method was used to estimate impact of first-line strategy on outcome. RESULTS: Of 604 consecutive luminal-like MBC patients identified, 158 cases were excluded due to unknown or positive HER2-status. Among 446 HER2-negative cases, 171 (38%) received first-line CT. On multivariate analysis, the only factors significantly associated with lower CT use were old age (OR 0.25, 95%C.I. 0.13-0.49) or presence of bone metastases only (OR 0.26, 95%C.I. 0.13-0.53). In propensity score matched population, no differences were observed between CT and ET as first-line treatment either in terms of overall survival (37.5 months and 33.4 months respectively, log-rank test, P = 0.62) or progression-free survival (13.3 months and 9.9 months respectively, log-rank test, P = 0.92). CONCLUSIONS: High percentage of patients with luminal-like MBC received CT as first-line therapy in real-life. The choice was mainly driven by age and site of metastases. With the limitations of a non-randomized comparison, no differences on patients' outcome were observed depending on the first-line strategy.
BACKGROUND: According to current guidelines, endocrine therapy (ET) is recommended as first-line treatment of luminal-like metastatic breast cancer (MBC), whereas chemotherapy (CT) should be considered in presence of life-threatening disease. In daily practice, CT is often used outside of this clinical circumstance. Factors influencing first-line choice and the relative impact on outcome are unknown. METHODS: A consecutive series of luminal-like HER2-negative MBCpatients treated from 2004 to 2014 was analyzed to test the association of disease- and patient-related factors with the choice of first-line treatment (ET vs. CT). A propensity score method was used to estimate impact of first-line strategy on outcome. RESULTS: Of 604 consecutive luminal-like MBCpatients identified, 158 cases were excluded due to unknown or positive HER2-status. Among 446 HER2-negative cases, 171 (38%) received first-line CT. On multivariate analysis, the only factors significantly associated with lower CT use were old age (OR 0.25, 95%C.I. 0.13-0.49) or presence of bone metastases only (OR 0.26, 95%C.I. 0.13-0.53). In propensity score matched population, no differences were observed between CT and ET as first-line treatment either in terms of overall survival (37.5 months and 33.4 months respectively, log-rank test, P = 0.62) or progression-free survival (13.3 months and 9.9 months respectively, log-rank test, P = 0.92). CONCLUSIONS: High percentage of patients with luminal-like MBC received CT as first-line therapy in real-life. The choice was mainly driven by age and site of metastases. With the limitations of a non-randomized comparison, no differences on patients' outcome were observed depending on the first-line strategy.
Authors: A P Nunes; C Liang; W J Gradishar; T Dalvi; J Lewis; N Jones; E Green; M Doherty; J D Seeger Journal: Curr Oncol Date: 2019-04-01 Impact factor: 3.677
Authors: Jennifer L Caswell-Jin; Alison Callahan; Natasha Purington; Summer S Han; Haruka Itakura; Esther M John; Douglas W Blayney; George W Sledge; Nigam H Shah; Allison W Kurian Journal: JCO Clin Cancer Inform Date: 2021-05
Authors: Lorenzo Gerratana; Jean-Yves Pierga; James M Reuben; Andrew A Davis; Firas H Wehbe; Luc Dirix; Tanja Fehm; Franco Nolé; Rafael Gisbert-Criado; Dimitrios Mavroudis; Salvatore Grisanti; Jose A Garcia-Saenz; Justin Stebbing; Carlos Caldas; Paola Gazzaniga; Luis Manso; Rita Zamarchi; Marta Bonotto; Angela Fernandez de Lascoiti; Leticia De Mattos-Arruda; Michail Ignatiadis; Maria-Teresa Sandri; Daniele Generali; Carmine De Angelis; Sarah-Jane Dawson; Wolfgang Janni; Vicente Carañana; Sabine Riethdorf; Erich-Franz Solomayer; Fabio Puglisi; Mario Giuliano; Klaus Pantel; François-Clément Bidard; Massimo Cristofanilli Journal: Oncologist Date: 2022-07-05 Impact factor: 5.837