| Literature DB >> 35579777 |
Chang Gong1, Ziliang Cheng2, Yaping Yang1, Jun Shen2, Yingying Zhu3, Li Ling3,4, Wanyi Lin1, Zhigang Yu5, Zhihua Li6, Weige Tan7, Chushan Zheng2, Wenbo Zheng7, Jiajie Zhong8, Xiang Zhang2, Yunjie Zeng8, Qiang Liu1, R Stephanie Huang9, Andrzej L Komorowski10, Eddy S Yang11, François Bertucci12, Francesco Ricci13, Armando Orlandi14, Gianluca Franceschini15, Kazuaki Takabe16, Suzanne Klimberg17, Naohiro Ishii18, Angela Toss19, Mona P Tan20, Mathew A Cherian21, Erwei Song22.
Abstract
Patients with hormone receptor (HR)-positive tumors breast cancer usually experience a relatively low pathological complete response (pCR) to neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC). Here, we derived a 10-microRNA risk score (10-miRNA RS)-based model with better performance in the prediction of pCR and validated its relation with the disease-free survival (DFS) in 755 HR-positive breast cancer patients (273, 265, and 217 in the training, internal, and external validation sets, respectively). This model, presented as a nomogram, included four parameters: the 10-miRNA RS found in our previous study, progesterone receptor (PR), human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) status, and volume transfer constant (Ktrans). Favorable calibration and discrimination of 10-miRNA RS-based model with areas under the curve (AUC) of 0.865, 0.811, and 0.804 were shown in the training, internal, and external validation sets, respectively. Patients who have higher nomogram score (>92.2) with NAC treatment would have longer DFS (hazard ratio=0.57; 95%CI: 0.39-0.83; P=0.004). In summary, our data showed the 10-miRNA RS-based model could precisely identify more patients who can attain pCR to NAC, which may help clinicians formulate the personalized initial treatment strategy and consequently achieves better clinical prognosis for patients with HR-positive breast cancer.Entities:
Keywords: dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging; hormone receptor-positive breast cancer; microRNA signature; neoadjuvant chemotherapy; nomogram
Year: 2022 PMID: 35579777 DOI: 10.1007/s11427-022-2104-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci China Life Sci ISSN: 1674-7305 Impact factor: 6.038