| Literature DB >> 34934058 |
Mary Kathryn Abel1,2, Amy M Shui3, Michelle Melisko4, A Jo Chien4, Emi J Yoshida5, Elizabeth M Lancaster2, Laura Van 't Veer6, Laura J Esserman2, Rita A Mukhtar7.
Abstract
When molecular testing classifies breast tumors as low risk but clinical risk is high, the optimal management strategy is unknown. One group of patients who may be more likely to have such discordant risk are those with invasive lobular carcinoma of the breast. We sought to examine whether patients with invasive lobular carcinoma are more likely to have clinical high/genomic low-risk tumors compared to those with invasive ductal carcinoma, and to evaluate the impact on receipt of chemotherapy and overall survival. We conducted a cohort study using the National Cancer Database from 2010-2016. Patients with hormone receptor positive, HER2 negative, stage I-III breast cancer who underwent 70-gene signature testing were included. We evaluated the proportion of patients with discordant clinical and genomic risk by histology using Kaplan-Meier plots, log-rank tests, and Cox proportional hazards models with and without propensity score matching. A total of 7399 patients (1497 with invasive lobular carcinoma [20.2%]) were identified. Patients with invasive lobular carcinoma were significantly more likely to fall into a discordant risk category compared to those with invasive ductal carcinoma (46.8% versus 37.1%, p < 0.001), especially in the clinical high/genomic low risk subgroup (35.6% versus 19.2%, p < 0.001). In unadjusted analysis of the clinical high/genomic low-risk cohort who received chemotherapy, invasive ductal carcinoma patients had significantly improved overall survival compared to those with invasive lobular carcinoma (p = 0.02). These findings suggest that current tools for stratifying clinical and genomic risk could be improved for those with invasive lobular carcinoma to better tailor treatment selection.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34934058 PMCID: PMC8692497 DOI: 10.1038/s41523-021-00366-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Breast Cancer ISSN: 2374-4677
Fig. 1CONSORT diagram for study population.
NCDB National Cancer Database, ER estrogen receptor, HER2 human epidermal growth factor receptor 2.
Clinicopathologic characteristics of study cohort.
| ILC ( | IDC ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age at diagnosis (years), mean (SD) | 60.9 (10.4) | 59.1 (11.1) | <0.001 |
| Pathologic stage, | <0.001 | ||
| I | 727 (48.6%) | 3744 (63.4%) | |
| II | 664 (44.4%) | 1993 (33.8%) | |
| III | 106 (7.1%) | 165 (2.8%) | |
| Tumor grade, | <0.001 | ||
| 1 | 345 (23.1%) | 1534 (26.0%) | |
| 2 | 1022 (68.3%) | 3137 (53.2%) | |
| 3 | 130 (8.7%) | 1231 (20.9%) | |
| Clinical risk, | <0.001 | ||
| Low | 719 (48.0%) | 3362 (57.0%) | |
| High | 778 (52.0%) | 2540 (43.0%) | |
| Genomic risk, | <0.001 | ||
| Low | 1085 (72.5%) | 3435 (58.2%) | |
| High | 412 (27.5%) | 2467 (41.8%) | |
| Surgical therapy, | <0.001 | ||
| Lumpectomy | 803 (53.6%) | 4018 (68.1%) | |
| Mastectomy | 694 (46.4%) | 1884 (31.9%) | |
| Adjuvant therapy, | |||
| Chemotherapy | 434 (29.5%) | 2164 (37.4%) | <0.001 |
| Endocrine therapy | 1375 (93.4%) | 5270 (91.0%) | 0.003 |
| Charlson-Deyo Score, | 0.434 | ||
| 0 | 1287 (86.0%) | 5052 (85.6%) | |
| 1 | 177 (11.8%) | 707 (12.0%) | |
| 2 | 22 (1.5%) | 114 (1.9%) | |
| ≥3 | 11 (0.73%) | 29 (0.49%) |
ILC invasive lobular carcinoma, IDC invasive ductal carcinoma.
Distribution of clinical and genomic risk categories by histology.
| ILC ( | IDC ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Concordant risk, | 797 (53.2%) | 3715 (62.9%) | |
| Clinical low/Genomic low | 552 (36.9%) | 2305 (39.1%) | |
| Clinical high/Genomic high | 245 (16.4%) | 1410 (23.9%) | |
| Discordant risk, | 700 (46.8%) | 2187 (37.1%) | <0.0011 |
| Clinical low/Genomic high | 167 (11.2%) | 1057 (17.9%) | |
| Clinical high/Genomic low | 533 (35.6%) | 1130 (19.2%) | <0.0012 |
Patients with ILC were significantly more likely to have discordance between clinical and genomic risk; among those with discordant risk, individuals with ILC were significantly more likely to have clinical high/genomic low-risk status.
1P value from chi-square tests for discordant risk vs. concordant risk.
2P value from chi-square tests for clinical high/genomic low status vs. clinical low/genomic high status.
ILC invasive lobular carcinoma, IDC invasive ductal carcinoma.
Receipt of chemotherapy stratified by clinical and genomic risk category and histologic subtype.
| Clinical/Genomic Risk Subgroup | Concordant risk | Discordant risk | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical low/Genomic low | Clinical high/Genomic high | Clinical low/Genomic high | Clinical high/Genomic low | |||||
| Histology | ILC | IDC | ILC | IDC | ILC | IDC | ILC | IDC |
| Chemotherapy | 15 (2.8%) | 70 (3.1%) | 180 (74.7%) | 1,133 (80.9%) | 121 (72.5%) | 726 (70.1%) | 118 (22.6%) | 235 (21.2%) |
| 0.67 | 0.0251 | 0.54 | 0.52 | |||||
Among patients with clinical high/genomic high risk, individuals with ILC were significantly less likely to receive chemotherapy.
ILC invasive lobular carcinoma, IDC invasive ductal carcinoma.
1P values from two-sample test of proportions.
Fig. 2Survival plots by chemotherapy status, clinical/genomic risk subgroup, and histology.
Survival plots by chemotherapy status in the clinical low/genomic high-risk subgroup and clinical high/genomic low-risk subgroup (A), in the clinical low/genomic high-risk subgroup by histology (B), and in the clinical high/genomic low-risk subgroups by histology (C).