| Literature DB >> 33994724 |
Satish Sankaran1, Jyoti Bajpai Dikshit1, Chandra Prakash Sv1, S E Mallikarjuna1, S P Somashekhar2, Shekhar Patil3,4, Rajeev Kumar5, Krishna Prasad6, Dinesh Shet7, Manjiri M Bakre1.
Abstract
CanAssist Breast (CAB) has thus far been validated on a retrospective cohort of 1123 patients who are mostly Indians. Distant metastasis-free survival (DMFS) of more than 95% was observed with significant separation (P < 0.0001) between low-risk and high-risk groups. In this study, we demonstrate the usefulness of CAB in guiding physicians to assess risk of cancer recurrence and to make informed treatment decisions for patients. Of more than 500 patients who have undergone CAB test, detailed analysis of 455 patients who were treated based on CAB-based risk predictions by more than 140 doctors across India is presented here. Majority of patients tested had node negative, T2, and grade 2 disease. Age and luminal subtypes did not affect the performance of CAB. On comparison with Adjuvant! Online (AOL), CAB categorized twice the number of patients into low risk indicating potential of overtreatment by AOL-based risk categorization. We assessed the impact of CAB testing on treatment decisions for 254 patients and observed that 92% low-risk patients were not given chemotherapy. Overall, we observed that 88% patients were either given or not given chemotherapy based on whether they were stratified as high risk or low risk for distant recurrence respectively. Based on these results, we conclude that CAB has been accepted by physicians to make treatment planning and provides a cost-effective alternative to other similar multigene prognostic tests currently available.Entities:
Keywords: CanAssist-Breast; Decision impact; Early-stage breast cancer; Indian patients; Prognostic
Year: 2019 PMID: 33994724 PMCID: PMC8119549 DOI: 10.1007/s13193-019-01014-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Surg Oncol ISSN: 0975-7651
Summary of commercially available prognostic tests
| Oncotype DX | MammaPrint | Prosigna | EndoPredict | Breast Cancer Index | CanAssist Breast | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. of genes used | 21 | 70 | 50 | 8 | 7 | 5 biomarkers |
| Proliferation genes included | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No |
| Method | qPCR | DNA microarray | NanoString | qPCR | qPCR | IHC |
| Clinical parameters | No | No | No | Tumor size, node status | No | Tumor size, node status, and tumor grade |
| Presence of intermediate zone | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | No |
| Prediction of chemotherapy benefit | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes |
Criteria used for clinical risk classification
| Grade | Nodal status | Tumor size | Clinical risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Well differentiated (grade 1) | N0 | ≤ 3 cm | C-Low |
| 3.1–5 cm | C-High | ||
| N1 (1–3 positive nodes) | ≤ 2 cm | C-Low | |
| 2.1–5 cm | C-High | ||
| Moderately differentiated (grade 2) | N0 | ≤ 2 cm | C-Low |
| 2.1–5 cm | C-High | ||
| N1 (1–3 positive nodes) | Any size | C-High | |
| Poorly differentiated (grade 3) | N0 | ≤ 1 cm | C-Low |
| 1.1–5 cm | C-High | ||
| N1 (1–3 positive nodes) | Any size | C-High |
Fig. 1Performance of CAB. a Survival (KM) curve using CAB-based risk categorization on a retrospective mixed cohort of chemotherapy-treated and chemotherapy-naïve (endocrine therapy alone treated) patients. b Survival analysis using CAB-based categorization with chemotherapy-naïve patient cohort
Cohorts’ description (n = 455). For T size, n = 448; luminal subtyping, 265 patients for whom Ki67 status was known were considered
| Parameter | Number of patients (%) |
|---|---|
| T1 | 178 (39.6) |
| T2 | 262 (58.4) |
| T3 | 9 (2.0) |
| N0 | 375 (82.4) |
| N+ | 80 (17.6) |
| G1 | 90 (19.8) |
| G2 | 297 (65.3) |
| G3 | 68 (14.9) |
| Luminal A | 83 (31.3) |
| Luminal B | 182 (68.7) |
| Age < 40 years | 23 (5.0) |
| Age 41–60 years | 252 (55.4) |
| Age > 61 years | 180 (39.6) |
Significance of low-risk proportions across various disease parameters
| Parameter | % low risk | |
|---|---|---|
| Luminal A | 70 | |
| Luminal B | 69 | |
| T1 | 83 | |
| T2+T3 | 61 | |
| N0 | 74 | |
| N+ | 54 | |
| G1 | 89 | |
| G2+G3 | 65 | |
| < 40 years | 74 | |
| > 40 years | 70 |
Fig. 2Comparison of risk categorization by CAB vs Adjuvant! Online. a Proportions of high- and low-risk categorization by the two tests. b Differential risk categorization by CAB vs Adjuvant! Online irrespective of node status. c Differential risk categorization by CAB vs Adjuvant! Online based on node status
Fig. 3Physician prescriptions. a Geographical distribution of prescribers of CAB in India and outside India (n = 440). b Percentage of physician prescriptions across based on number of cases prescribed
Treatment decsions based on CAB-based risk categorization
| Risk category by CAB | No. of patients | Chemotherapy given | Chemotherapy not given | Percentage of patients |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low risk | 173 | 14 | 159 | 92% did not receive chemotherapy |
| High risk | 81 | 65 | 16 | 80% received chemotherapy |
| Total | 254 | 159 + 65 = 224 | 88% received chemotherapy if they were high risk and no chemotherapy if they were low risk | |