| Literature DB >> 34066769 |
Hesham Elghazaly1, Hope S Rugo2, Hamdy A Azim3, Sandra M Swain4, Banu Arun5, Matti Aapro6, Edith A Perez7, Benjamin O Anderson8, Frederique Penault-Llorca9, Pierfranco Conte10, Nagi S El Saghir11, Cheng-Har Yip12, Marwan Ghosn13, Philip Poortmans14, Mohamed A Shehata15, Armando E Giuliano16, Jessica W T Leung17, Valentina Guarneri10, Joseph Gligorov18, Bahadir M Gulluoglu19, Hany Abdel Aziz1, Mona Frolova20, Mohamed Sabry1, Charles M Balch21, Roberto Orecchia22, Heba M El-Zawahry3, Sana Al-Sukhun23, Khaled Abdel Karim1, Alaa Kandil24, Ruslan M Paltuev25, Meteb Foheidi26, Mohamed El-Shinawi27,28, Manal ElMahdy29, Omalkhair Abulkhair30, Wentao Yang31, Adel T Aref32, Joaira Bakkach33, Nermean Bahie Eldin1, Hagar Elghazawy1.
Abstract
Background: The management of patients with triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is challenging with several controversies and unmet needs. During the 12th Breast-Gynaecological & Immuno-oncology International Cancer Conference (BGICC) Egypt, 2020, a panel of 35 breast cancer experts from 13 countries voted on consensus guidelines for the clinical management of TNBC. The consensus was subsequently updated based on the most recent data evolved lately.Entities:
Keywords: BRCA mutations; consensus; immunotherapy; platinum; triple-negative breast cancer
Year: 2021 PMID: 34066769 PMCID: PMC8125909 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13092262
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
List of panellists (Alphabetical).
| 1. Aapro M. | 13. El Saghir N.S. | 25. Paltuev R.M. |
Grades of Recommendation.
| Grade | Recommendation | Grades of Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| A | Strongly recommended | Strong evidence for efficacy with a substantial clinical benefit. |
| B | Generally recommended | Strong or moderate evidence for efficacy but with a limited clinical benefit. |
| C | Optional | Insufficient evidence for efficacy or benefit does not outweigh the risk or the disadvantages (adverse events, costs, etc.). |
| D | Generally, not recommended | Moderate evidence against efficacy or for adverse outcome. |
| E | Never recommended | Strong evidence against efficacy or for adverse outcome. |
Levels of evidence.
| Level | Levels of Evidence |
|---|---|
| I | Evidence from at least one large randomized, controlled trial of good methodological quality (low potential for bias) or meta-analyses of well-conducted randomized trials without heterogeneity. |
| II | Small, randomized trials or large randomized trials with suspicion of bias (lower methodological quality) or meta-analyses of such trials or of trials with demonstrated heterogeneity. |
| III | Prospective cohort studies. |
| IV | Retrospective cohort studies or case–control studies. |
| V | Studies without a control group, case reports, expert opinions. |
Levels of evidence and grades of recommendation of the consensus meeting statements.
| Statements | Percentage of Consensus Votes | Level of Evidence (LOE) | Grade of Recommendation (GOR) |
|---|---|---|---|
| TNBC disease is defined as HER2− with ER and PR expression <1%. |
| I | A |
| HER2− and ER/PR expression between 1–10% tumours would be treated clinically as TNBC, being not eligible to receive endocrine therapy as a monotherapy. | 61.5% | IV | C |
| Germline | 67% | II | B |
| Androgen receptor (AR) reporting has no current role in TNBC management plan and should be reported in TNBC cases for research purposes only. |
| II | B |
| TILs reporting has no current role in standard of care of TNBC and should be reported for research purposes only. If reported, it should be according to the International Working Group Criteria, 2014, on the stromal +/− intra-tumoural immune cells. | 44% | II | A |
| Ki67 has no evident role in the current standard of care of TNBC and should be reported for research purposes only. | 70% | II | A |
| It is mandatory to repeat hormonal receptors and HER2 assessment after neo-adjuvant treatment in TNBC patients with any residual disease. Capturing any overexpression of these markers avoids missing any opportunity of adjuvant therapy. |
| III | A |
| If HER2 assessment by IHC changed to HER2+ after neo-adjuvant treatment in TNBC, it is preferred to offer adjuvant anti-HER2 therapy. |
| Expert opinion | A |
| For early TNBC cases (cT1–2N0), mastectomy is not the preferred surgery for the ipsilateral breast, if the patient is eligible for BCT. |
| IV | A |
| For |
| IV | C |
| For | 69% | IV | C |
| TNBC biology per se is not an absolute indication for postoperative radiation therapy after mastectomy for all pT1–2 N0 TNBC cases. |
| IV | C |
| Hypo-fractionation regimens can be considered for both early and advanced TNBC cases. |
| II | B |
| It is preferred to offer radiation therapy boost to tumour bed for all cases of TNBC after lumpectomy. | 58% | IV | B |
| After upfront surgery for pT1–3 N0 TNBC, offering regional nodal irradiation is based on the clinico-pathological features including but not limited to TNBC biology only, such as LVI and high grade. |
| II | B |
| After mastectomy for pN1 (1–3 + LNs) TNBC, regional nodal irradiation is preferred. |
| I | B |
| The preferred local management for the axilla for TNBC patients with Z-0011 criteria is controversial. |
| II | B |
| There is no preference regarding the timing of reconstruction (immediate vs. delayed) after breast surgery for TNBC. | 68% | II | B |
| For early-stage TNBC (cT2–3 N0); NAT is preferred over upfront surgery (regardless of the planned surgery type). |
| II | A |
| For early-stage TNBC (cT2–3 N1); NAT is preferred over upfront surgery (regardless of the planned surgery type). |
| I | A |
| NAT regimens for TNBC are preferred to be administered for 6–8 cycles. |
| I | B |
| Adding platinum to the standard anthracyclines/taxanes NAT regimen is preferred especially with stage II–III TNBC and if suboptimal tumour response was achieved following anthracyclines. |
| II | B |
| De-escalating the neo-adjuvant chemotherapy in TNBC by offering a short, anthracycline-free, taxane/platinum regimen only, for early responders (response adapted approach, ADAPT-TN trial), is not preferred. |
| II | B |
| A carboplatin-including regimen is preferred in the NAT setting for | 69.2% | II | C |
| A carboplatin-including regimen is not preferred in the NAT setting for | 66.6% | II | C |
| No mature data yet to support the use of Pembrolizumab or Atezolizumab in the NAT setting for early TNBC. | 72% | II | B |
| Capecitabine (6–8 cycles) is the preferred adjuvant therapy in case of absence of pCR after NAT (anthracyclines/taxanes) for TNBC. |
| II | A |
| In the presence of pCR after NAT (anthracylines/taxanes) for TNBC, no further adjuvant systemic therapy is advised. |
| II | A |
| Adjuvant chemotherapy for pT1a N0 TNBC can be omitted safely. |
| II | A |
| Adjuvant chemotherapy for pT1b N0 TNBC is preferred. |
| II | A |
| After upfront surgery, for stage I TNBC, the preferred adjuvant regimen is 6 cycles anthracyclines/taxanes. |
| I | A |
| After upfront surgery, for stage II–III TNBC, the preferred adjuvant regimen is 6–8 cycles anthracyclines/taxanes. | 61% | I | B |
| Dose dense AC-T regimen is a preferred one over standard regimen (/3 wks) in the adjuvant setting for stage II–III TNBC. |
| II | A |
| If TNBC case developed metastasis, tissue biopsy and testing for ER, PR, HER2, PDL-1/germline |
| I | A |
| After complete resection of isolated loco-regional recurrence (LRR) in non-metastatic TNBC, chemotherapy is recommended for 3–6 months. |
| II | A |
| Metastatic TNBC disease (mTNBC) is a heterogeneous disease and should be categorized as the following: (1) PD-L1+ mTNBC, (2) |
| I | A |
| Atezolizumab + nab-paclitaxel or Pembrolizumab + chemotherapy are preferred options over standard chemotherapy in the first-line setting for unresectable locally advanced/mTNBC expressing PD-L1 (PDL-1 ≥ 1% for Atezolizumab or CPS ≥ 10 for Pembrolizumab). |
| I | B |
| For the 1st-line immunotherapy for PDL1+ mTNBC, no preference for one over the other (Atezolizumab/Pembrolizumab) as no head-to-head comparison. | 58% | I | B |
| No mature data yet to support the use of Pembrolizumab in the subsequent lines in the metastatic setting of TNBC. |
| II | B |
| Atezolizumab plus nab-paclitaxel should be offered for unresectable locally advanced/mTNBC patients after PD-L1 testing to identify the PD-L1+ population. |
| I | A |
| If Atezolizumab is planned, PD-L1 should be tested using the Ventana SP142 IHC on the tumoural immune cells, with the cut-off value for PD-L1 positivity is 1%. |
| I | A |
| If Pembrolizumab is planned, PD-L1 should be tested by 22C3 pharmDx test, with the cut-off of CPS ≥ 10. |
| I | A |
| For | 66% | I | A |
| No mature data yet to support the use of Veliparib in the metastatic setting of TNBC. |
| II | C |
| For mTNBC with PD-L1−/w |
| II | B |
| For mTNBC with PD-L1−/w | 60% | III | C |
| For mTNBC with PD-L1−/w |
| III | B |
| For mTNBC with PD-L1−/w |
| II | B |
| In AR+ mTNBC, AR-directed therapy is not recommended for the management of mTNBC outside clinical trials. |
| II | D |
| Sacituzumab govitecan is preferred over chemotherapy after ≥ 2 prior chemotherapies for mTNBC. |
| I | A |