Literature DB >> 29768301

Germline genome-wide association studies in women receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy with or without bevacizumab.

James N Ingle1, Krishna R Kalari2, Donald Lawrence Wickerham3,4, Gunter von Minckwitz5, Peter A Fasching6, Yoichi Furukawa7, Taisei Mushiroda7, Matthew P Goetz1, Poulami Barman2, Erin E Carlson2, Priya Rastogi4,8, Joseph P Costantino4,9, Junmei Cairns10, Soonmyung Paik4,11, Harry D Bear4,12, Michiaki Kubo7, Liewei Wang10, Norman Wolmark3,4, Richard M Weinshilboum10.   

Abstract

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) for breast cancer is widely utilized, and we performed genome-wide association studies (GWAS) to determine whether germ-line genetic variability was associated with benefit in terms of pathological complete response (pCR), disease-free survival, and overall survival in patients entered on the NSABP B-40 NAC trial, wherein patients were randomized to receive, or not, bevacizumab in addition to chemotherapy. Patient DNA samples were genotyped with the Illumina OmniExpress BeadChip. Replication was attempted with genotyping data from 1398 HER2-negative patients entered on the GeparQuinto NAC study in which patients were also randomized to receive, or not, bevacizumab in addition to chemotherapy. A total of 920 women from B-40 were analyzed, and 237 patients achieved a pCR. GWAS with three phenotypes (pCR, disease-free survival, overall survival) revealed no single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that were genome-wide significant (i.e. P≤5E-08) signals; P values for top SNPs were 2.04E-07, 5.61E-08, and 5.63E-08, respectively, and these SNPs were not significant in the GeparQuinto data. An ad-hoc GWAS was performed in the patients randomized to bevacizumab (457 patients with 128 pCR) who showed signals on chromosome 6, located within a gene, CDKAL1, that approached, but did not reach, genome-wide significance (top SNP rs7453577, P=2.97E-07). However, this finding was significant when tested in the GeparQuinto data set (P=0.04). In conclusion, we identified no SNPs significantly associated with NAC. The observation, in a hypothesis-generating GWAS, of an SNP in CDKAL1 associated with pCR in the bevacizumab arm of both B-40 and GeparQuinto requires further validation and study.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29768301      PMCID: PMC5965682          DOI: 10.1097/FPC.0000000000000337

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pharmacogenet Genomics        ISSN: 1744-6872            Impact factor:   2.089


  13 in total

1.  Neoadjuvant chemotherapy and bevacizumab for HER2-negative breast cancer.

Authors:  Gunter von Minckwitz; Holger Eidtmann; Mahdi Rezai; Peter A Fasching; Hans Tesch; Holm Eggemann; Iris Schrader; Kornelia Kittel; Claus Hanusch; Rolf Kreienberg; Christine Solbach; Bernd Gerber; Christian Jackisch; Georg Kunz; Jens-Uwe Blohmer; Jens Huober; Maik Hauschild; Tanja Fehm; Berit Maria Müller; Carsten Denkert; Sibylle Loibl; Valentina Nekljudova; Michael Untch
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2012-01-26       Impact factor: 91.245

2.  Bevacizumab added to neoadjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer.

Authors:  Harry D Bear; Gong Tang; Priya Rastogi; Charles E Geyer; André Robidoux; James N Atkins; Luis Baez-Diaz; Adam M Brufsky; Rita S Mehta; Louis Fehrenbacher; James A Young; Francis M Senecal; Rakesh Gaur; Richard G Margolese; Paul T Adams; Howard M Gross; Joseph P Costantino; Sandra M Swain; Eleftherios P Mamounas; Norman Wolmark
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2012-01-26       Impact factor: 91.245

3.  Principal components analysis corrects for stratification in genome-wide association studies.

Authors:  Alkes L Price; Nick J Patterson; Robert M Plenge; Michael E Weinblatt; Nancy A Shadick; David Reich
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2006-07-23       Impact factor: 38.330

4.  Tailoring therapies--improving the management of early breast cancer: St Gallen International Expert Consensus on the Primary Therapy of Early Breast Cancer 2015.

Authors:  A S Coates; E P Winer; A Goldhirsch; R D Gelber; M Gnant; M Piccart-Gebhart; B Thürlimann; H-J Senn
Journal:  Ann Oncol       Date:  2015-05-04       Impact factor: 32.976

5.  Efficacy of neoadjuvant bevacizumab added to docetaxel followed by fluorouracil, epirubicin, and cyclophosphamide, for women with HER2-negative early breast cancer (ARTemis): an open-label, randomised, phase 3 trial.

Authors:  Helena M Earl; Louise Hiller; Janet A Dunn; Clare Blenkinsop; Louise Grybowicz; Anne-Laure Vallier; Jean Abraham; Jeremy Thomas; Elena Provenzano; Luke Hughes-Davies; Ioannis Gounaris; Karen McAdam; Stephen Chan; Rizvana Ahmad; Tamas Hickish; Stephen Houston; Daniel Rea; John Bartlett; Carlos Caldas; David A Cameron; Larry Hayward
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2015-05-11       Impact factor: 41.316

Review 6.  Pathological complete response and long-term clinical benefit in breast cancer: the CTNeoBC pooled analysis.

Authors:  Patricia Cortazar; Lijun Zhang; Michael Untch; Keyur Mehta; Joseph P Costantino; Norman Wolmark; Hervé Bonnefoi; David Cameron; Luca Gianni; Pinuccia Valagussa; Sandra M Swain; Tatiana Prowell; Sibylle Loibl; D Lawrence Wickerham; Jan Bogaerts; Jose Baselga; Charles Perou; Gideon Blumenthal; Jens Blohmer; Eleftherios P Mamounas; Jonas Bergh; Vladimir Semiglazov; Robert Justice; Holger Eidtmann; Soonmyung Paik; Martine Piccart; Rajeshwari Sridhara; Peter A Fasching; Leen Slaets; Shenghui Tang; Bernd Gerber; Charles E Geyer; Richard Pazdur; Nina Ditsch; Priya Rastogi; Wolfgang Eiermann; Gunter von Minckwitz
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2014-02-14       Impact factor: 79.321

7.  Paclitaxel plus bevacizumab versus paclitaxel alone for metastatic breast cancer.

Authors:  Kathy Miller; Molin Wang; Julie Gralow; Maura Dickler; Melody Cobleigh; Edith A Perez; Tamara Shenkier; David Cella; Nancy E Davidson
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2007-12-27       Impact factor: 91.245

8.  Survival after neoadjuvant chemotherapy with or without bevacizumab or everolimus for HER2-negative primary breast cancer (GBG 44-GeparQuinto)†.

Authors:  G von Minckwitz; S Loibl; M Untch; H Eidtmann; M Rezai; P A Fasching; H Tesch; H Eggemann; I Schrader; K Kittel; C Hanusch; J Huober; C Solbach; C Jackisch; G Kunz; J U Blohmer; M Hauschild; T Fehm; V Nekljudova; B Gerber
Journal:  Ann Oncol       Date:  2014-09-15       Impact factor: 32.976

9.  Population structure and eigenanalysis.

Authors:  Nick Patterson; Alkes L Price; David Reich
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2006-12       Impact factor: 5.917

10.  Cdkal1, a type 2 diabetes susceptibility gene, regulates mitochondrial function in adipose tissue.

Authors:  Colin J Palmer; Raphael J Bruckner; Joao A Paulo; Lawrence Kazak; Jonathan Z Long; Amir I Mina; Zhaoming Deng; Katherine B LeClair; Jessica A Hall; Shangyu Hong; Peter-James H Zushin; Kyle L Smith; Steven P Gygi; Susan Hagen; David E Cohen; Alexander S Banks
Journal:  Mol Metab       Date:  2017-07-31       Impact factor: 7.422

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  1 in total

1.  Genome-wide association studies of survival in 1520 cancer patients treated with bevacizumab-containing regimens.

Authors:  Julia C F Quintanilha; Jin Wang; Alexander B Sibley; Wei Xu; Osvaldo Espin-Garcia; Chen Jiang; Amy S Etheridge; Mark J Ratain; Heinz-Josef Lenz; Monica Bertagnolli; Hedy L Kindler; Maura N Dickler; Alan Venook; Geoffrey Liu; Kouros Owzar; Danyu Lin; Federico Innocenti
Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  2021-10-05       Impact factor: 7.316

  1 in total

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