Trial updates will help tailor endocrine therapy for premenopausal breast cancer

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– Adjuvant endocrine therapies improve outcomes of premenopausal breast cancer in the long term, with absolute benefit varying somewhat by therapy and by patient and disease characteristics, according to planned updates of a pair of pivotal phase 3 trials.

The trials – TEXT (Tamoxifen and Exemestane Trial) and SOFT (Suppression of Ovarian Function Trial) – are coordinated by the International Breast Cancer Study Group and together randomized more than 5,000 premenopausal women with early hormone receptor–positive breast cancer to 5 years of various types of adjuvant endocrine therapy. Their initial results, reported several years ago, form part of treatment guidelines that are used worldwide.

Dr. Gini Fleming
In an updated joint analysis of TEXT and SOFT, benefit of the aromatase inhibitor (AI) exemestane plus ovarian function suppression (OFS) over the selective estrogen-receptor modulator tamoxifen plus OFS was sustained, with a 4.0% absolute gain in 8-year disease-free survival, investigators reported at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. And in an updated analysis of SOFT, the benefit of tamoxifen plus OFS over tamoxifen alone became significant, with a 4.2% absolute gain in 8-year disease-free survival.

Relative benefits for various outcomes were generally similar across subgroups, but absolute benefits were greater for women having certain features increasing risk for poor outcomes.
 

Clinical implications

These updates, along with other emerging data, can be used to optimize endocrine therapy for younger women with breast cancer, according to invited discussant Ann H. Partridge, MD, of Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston.

“For higher-risk disease, we should be considering OFS. At this point in time, I don’t think HER2 status alone should drive this decision,” she commented. “If you are getting OFS, what do we do, AI versus tamoxifen? Well, we do see a large improvement in disease-free survival [with AIs], so many women will want to use AIs. Yet tamoxifen is still reasonable, especially in light of the survival data.”

Data on switch strategies and extended-duration therapy are generally lacking at present for the premenopausal population, Dr. Partridge noted. “That’s something that we still need to extrapolate from data that’s predominantly in postmenopausal women.”

Another compelling question is whether OFS can be used instead of chemo for some patients. “We are increasingly recognizing that women with higher-risk anatomy and lower-risk biology having endocrine-responsive tumors may get more bang for the buck from the optimizing of hormonal therapy, and chemo may not add much,” she said.

Both short- and long-term toxicities of the various endocrine therapies and, for aromatase inhibitors, the potential for breakthrough (return of estradiol levels to premenopausal levels) also need to be considered, Dr. Partridge stressed. “And ultimately, patient preference and tolerance are key. After all, the best treatment is the one the patient will take.”

“We need to follow these women on TEXT and SOFT very long term. It would be a crime not to follow these women further out,” she maintained. “We need to conduct real-world comparative effectiveness research to understand the risks and benefits of OFS more fully in our survivors. Then, as we start to suppress more ovaries in more women with breast cancer, we need to be aware clinically of these risks, and we need to share this awareness with their primary care providers because we need to optimize in particular their cardiovascular risk factors, and screen and treat for potential comorbidities that they may be at higher risk for.”
 

Joint TEXT and SOFT update

Initial results of the joint TEXT and SOFT analysis, reported after a median follow-up of 5.7 years, showed that exemestane plus OFS was superior to tamoxifen plus OFS for the primary outcome, providing a significant 3.8% absolute gain in 5-year disease-free survival (N Engl J Med. 2014;371:107-18).

The updated joint analysis, now with a median follow-up of 9 years and based on data from 4,690 women, showed that the 8-year rate of disease-free survival was 86.8% with exemestane plus OFS versus 82.8% with tamoxifen plus OFS (hazard ratio, 0.77; P = .0006), for a similar absolute benefit of 4.0%, reported Prudence Francis, MD, of the University of Melbourne, head of Medical Oncology in the Breast Service at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne.

In stratified analysis, absolute benefit tended to be greater among women in TEXT who received chemotherapy (6.0%); intermediate among women in TEXT who did not receive chemotherapy (3.7%) and women in SOFT who received prior chemotherapy (3.7%); and less among women in SOFT who did not receive chemotherapy (1.9%).

Exemestane plus OFS was also superior to tamoxifen plus OFS in terms of breast cancer–free interval, with an absolute 4.1% benefit (P = .0002), and distant recurrence–free interval, with an absolute 2.1% benefit (P = .02). Overall survival did not differ significantly between arms.

Among the 86% of patients with HER2-negative disease, exemestane plus OFS netted an absolute disease-free survival gain of 5.4% and an absolute distant recurrence–free interval gain of 3.4%. There was a consistent relative treatment benefit across subgroups, but larger absolute benefit, on the order of 5%-9%, in women given chemotherapy and in those younger than 35 years.

“Results for the HER2-positive subgroup require further investigation,” Dr. Francis said. “The trials enrolled both before and after the routine use of adjuvant trastuzumab, and a significant proportion of the patients with HER2-positive breast cancer did not receive adjuvant HER2-targeted therapy.”

In the entire joint-analysis population, exemestane plus OFS was associated with higher rates of musculoskeletal events of grade 3 or 4 (11% vs. 6%) and osteoporosis of grade 2-4 (15% vs. 7%), while tamoxifen plus OFS was associated with a higher rate of thrombosis/embolism of grade 2-4 (2.3% vs. 1.2%) and more cases of endometrial cancer (9 vs. 4 cases). At 4 years, early discontinuation of oral endocrine therapy was greater for exemestane than for tamoxifen (25% vs. 19%).

“After longer follow-up, with a median of 9 years, the combined analysis results confirm a statistically significant improvement in disease outcomes with exemestane plus ovarian suppression. As is critical given the long natural history of estrogen receptor–positive breast cancer, follow-up in these trials is currently continuing,” Dr. Francis summarized.

“To optimally translate the observed absolute trial improvements into clinical practice, oncologists need to discuss and weigh the potential benefits and toxicities in each individual patient who is premenopausal with hormone receptor–positive breast cancer,” she recommended.

Session attendee Hope S. Rugo, MD, of the University of California, San Francisco, Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, noted that exemestane had superior benefit despite the 25% rate of early discontinuation. “I wonder if one of the interpretations of that, given the toxicity of this therapy for very young women, is that we need some but maybe not so much. Maybe they don’t need 5 years altogether,” she said.

“The fact that they stopped their assigned endocrine therapy doesn’t mean that they didn’t continue any therapy. They may have switched over to tamoxifen or they may have decided they wanted to have a baby or there may have been many other things,” Dr. Francis replied, noting that analyses sorting out the reasons for early discontinuation are planned.

Session attendee Mark E. Sherman, MD, of the Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, Fla., asked, “Do you have any ability to test for tamoxifen metabolites? It’s possible that a third to a half of patients got reduced benefit from that drug.”

Banked samples are available and a substudy is planned, according to Dr. Francis. “We haven’t got data on that yet, but yes, we are analyzing that.”
 

 

 

SOFT update

Initial results of the SOFT trial, reported after a median follow-up of 5.6 years, showed that adding OFS to tamoxifen did not significantly improve disease-free survival over tamoxifen alone in the entire trial population (N Engl J Med. 2015;372:436-46). However, there was benefit for women who received chemotherapy and remained premenopausal.

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– Adjuvant endocrine therapies improve outcomes of premenopausal breast cancer in the long term, with absolute benefit varying somewhat by therapy and by patient and disease characteristics, according to planned updates of a pair of pivotal phase 3 trials.

The trials – TEXT (Tamoxifen and Exemestane Trial) and SOFT (Suppression of Ovarian Function Trial) – are coordinated by the International Breast Cancer Study Group and together randomized more than 5,000 premenopausal women with early hormone receptor–positive breast cancer to 5 years of various types of adjuvant endocrine therapy. Their initial results, reported several years ago, form part of treatment guidelines that are used worldwide.

Dr. Gini Fleming
In an updated joint analysis of TEXT and SOFT, benefit of the aromatase inhibitor (AI) exemestane plus ovarian function suppression (OFS) over the selective estrogen-receptor modulator tamoxifen plus OFS was sustained, with a 4.0% absolute gain in 8-year disease-free survival, investigators reported at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. And in an updated analysis of SOFT, the benefit of tamoxifen plus OFS over tamoxifen alone became significant, with a 4.2% absolute gain in 8-year disease-free survival.

Relative benefits for various outcomes were generally similar across subgroups, but absolute benefits were greater for women having certain features increasing risk for poor outcomes.
 

Clinical implications

These updates, along with other emerging data, can be used to optimize endocrine therapy for younger women with breast cancer, according to invited discussant Ann H. Partridge, MD, of Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston.

“For higher-risk disease, we should be considering OFS. At this point in time, I don’t think HER2 status alone should drive this decision,” she commented. “If you are getting OFS, what do we do, AI versus tamoxifen? Well, we do see a large improvement in disease-free survival [with AIs], so many women will want to use AIs. Yet tamoxifen is still reasonable, especially in light of the survival data.”

Data on switch strategies and extended-duration therapy are generally lacking at present for the premenopausal population, Dr. Partridge noted. “That’s something that we still need to extrapolate from data that’s predominantly in postmenopausal women.”

Another compelling question is whether OFS can be used instead of chemo for some patients. “We are increasingly recognizing that women with higher-risk anatomy and lower-risk biology having endocrine-responsive tumors may get more bang for the buck from the optimizing of hormonal therapy, and chemo may not add much,” she said.

Both short- and long-term toxicities of the various endocrine therapies and, for aromatase inhibitors, the potential for breakthrough (return of estradiol levels to premenopausal levels) also need to be considered, Dr. Partridge stressed. “And ultimately, patient preference and tolerance are key. After all, the best treatment is the one the patient will take.”

“We need to follow these women on TEXT and SOFT very long term. It would be a crime not to follow these women further out,” she maintained. “We need to conduct real-world comparative effectiveness research to understand the risks and benefits of OFS more fully in our survivors. Then, as we start to suppress more ovaries in more women with breast cancer, we need to be aware clinically of these risks, and we need to share this awareness with their primary care providers because we need to optimize in particular their cardiovascular risk factors, and screen and treat for potential comorbidities that they may be at higher risk for.”
 

Joint TEXT and SOFT update

Initial results of the joint TEXT and SOFT analysis, reported after a median follow-up of 5.7 years, showed that exemestane plus OFS was superior to tamoxifen plus OFS for the primary outcome, providing a significant 3.8% absolute gain in 5-year disease-free survival (N Engl J Med. 2014;371:107-18).

The updated joint analysis, now with a median follow-up of 9 years and based on data from 4,690 women, showed that the 8-year rate of disease-free survival was 86.8% with exemestane plus OFS versus 82.8% with tamoxifen plus OFS (hazard ratio, 0.77; P = .0006), for a similar absolute benefit of 4.0%, reported Prudence Francis, MD, of the University of Melbourne, head of Medical Oncology in the Breast Service at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne.

In stratified analysis, absolute benefit tended to be greater among women in TEXT who received chemotherapy (6.0%); intermediate among women in TEXT who did not receive chemotherapy (3.7%) and women in SOFT who received prior chemotherapy (3.7%); and less among women in SOFT who did not receive chemotherapy (1.9%).

Exemestane plus OFS was also superior to tamoxifen plus OFS in terms of breast cancer–free interval, with an absolute 4.1% benefit (P = .0002), and distant recurrence–free interval, with an absolute 2.1% benefit (P = .02). Overall survival did not differ significantly between arms.

Among the 86% of patients with HER2-negative disease, exemestane plus OFS netted an absolute disease-free survival gain of 5.4% and an absolute distant recurrence–free interval gain of 3.4%. There was a consistent relative treatment benefit across subgroups, but larger absolute benefit, on the order of 5%-9%, in women given chemotherapy and in those younger than 35 years.

“Results for the HER2-positive subgroup require further investigation,” Dr. Francis said. “The trials enrolled both before and after the routine use of adjuvant trastuzumab, and a significant proportion of the patients with HER2-positive breast cancer did not receive adjuvant HER2-targeted therapy.”

In the entire joint-analysis population, exemestane plus OFS was associated with higher rates of musculoskeletal events of grade 3 or 4 (11% vs. 6%) and osteoporosis of grade 2-4 (15% vs. 7%), while tamoxifen plus OFS was associated with a higher rate of thrombosis/embolism of grade 2-4 (2.3% vs. 1.2%) and more cases of endometrial cancer (9 vs. 4 cases). At 4 years, early discontinuation of oral endocrine therapy was greater for exemestane than for tamoxifen (25% vs. 19%).

“After longer follow-up, with a median of 9 years, the combined analysis results confirm a statistically significant improvement in disease outcomes with exemestane plus ovarian suppression. As is critical given the long natural history of estrogen receptor–positive breast cancer, follow-up in these trials is currently continuing,” Dr. Francis summarized.

“To optimally translate the observed absolute trial improvements into clinical practice, oncologists need to discuss and weigh the potential benefits and toxicities in each individual patient who is premenopausal with hormone receptor–positive breast cancer,” she recommended.

Session attendee Hope S. Rugo, MD, of the University of California, San Francisco, Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, noted that exemestane had superior benefit despite the 25% rate of early discontinuation. “I wonder if one of the interpretations of that, given the toxicity of this therapy for very young women, is that we need some but maybe not so much. Maybe they don’t need 5 years altogether,” she said.

“The fact that they stopped their assigned endocrine therapy doesn’t mean that they didn’t continue any therapy. They may have switched over to tamoxifen or they may have decided they wanted to have a baby or there may have been many other things,” Dr. Francis replied, noting that analyses sorting out the reasons for early discontinuation are planned.

Session attendee Mark E. Sherman, MD, of the Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, Fla., asked, “Do you have any ability to test for tamoxifen metabolites? It’s possible that a third to a half of patients got reduced benefit from that drug.”

Banked samples are available and a substudy is planned, according to Dr. Francis. “We haven’t got data on that yet, but yes, we are analyzing that.”
 

 

 

SOFT update

Initial results of the SOFT trial, reported after a median follow-up of 5.6 years, showed that adding OFS to tamoxifen did not significantly improve disease-free survival over tamoxifen alone in the entire trial population (N Engl J Med. 2015;372:436-46). However, there was benefit for women who received chemotherapy and remained premenopausal.

 

– Adjuvant endocrine therapies improve outcomes of premenopausal breast cancer in the long term, with absolute benefit varying somewhat by therapy and by patient and disease characteristics, according to planned updates of a pair of pivotal phase 3 trials.

The trials – TEXT (Tamoxifen and Exemestane Trial) and SOFT (Suppression of Ovarian Function Trial) – are coordinated by the International Breast Cancer Study Group and together randomized more than 5,000 premenopausal women with early hormone receptor–positive breast cancer to 5 years of various types of adjuvant endocrine therapy. Their initial results, reported several years ago, form part of treatment guidelines that are used worldwide.

Dr. Gini Fleming
In an updated joint analysis of TEXT and SOFT, benefit of the aromatase inhibitor (AI) exemestane plus ovarian function suppression (OFS) over the selective estrogen-receptor modulator tamoxifen plus OFS was sustained, with a 4.0% absolute gain in 8-year disease-free survival, investigators reported at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. And in an updated analysis of SOFT, the benefit of tamoxifen plus OFS over tamoxifen alone became significant, with a 4.2% absolute gain in 8-year disease-free survival.

Relative benefits for various outcomes were generally similar across subgroups, but absolute benefits were greater for women having certain features increasing risk for poor outcomes.
 

Clinical implications

These updates, along with other emerging data, can be used to optimize endocrine therapy for younger women with breast cancer, according to invited discussant Ann H. Partridge, MD, of Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston.

“For higher-risk disease, we should be considering OFS. At this point in time, I don’t think HER2 status alone should drive this decision,” she commented. “If you are getting OFS, what do we do, AI versus tamoxifen? Well, we do see a large improvement in disease-free survival [with AIs], so many women will want to use AIs. Yet tamoxifen is still reasonable, especially in light of the survival data.”

Data on switch strategies and extended-duration therapy are generally lacking at present for the premenopausal population, Dr. Partridge noted. “That’s something that we still need to extrapolate from data that’s predominantly in postmenopausal women.”

Another compelling question is whether OFS can be used instead of chemo for some patients. “We are increasingly recognizing that women with higher-risk anatomy and lower-risk biology having endocrine-responsive tumors may get more bang for the buck from the optimizing of hormonal therapy, and chemo may not add much,” she said.

Both short- and long-term toxicities of the various endocrine therapies and, for aromatase inhibitors, the potential for breakthrough (return of estradiol levels to premenopausal levels) also need to be considered, Dr. Partridge stressed. “And ultimately, patient preference and tolerance are key. After all, the best treatment is the one the patient will take.”

“We need to follow these women on TEXT and SOFT very long term. It would be a crime not to follow these women further out,” she maintained. “We need to conduct real-world comparative effectiveness research to understand the risks and benefits of OFS more fully in our survivors. Then, as we start to suppress more ovaries in more women with breast cancer, we need to be aware clinically of these risks, and we need to share this awareness with their primary care providers because we need to optimize in particular their cardiovascular risk factors, and screen and treat for potential comorbidities that they may be at higher risk for.”
 

Joint TEXT and SOFT update

Initial results of the joint TEXT and SOFT analysis, reported after a median follow-up of 5.7 years, showed that exemestane plus OFS was superior to tamoxifen plus OFS for the primary outcome, providing a significant 3.8% absolute gain in 5-year disease-free survival (N Engl J Med. 2014;371:107-18).

The updated joint analysis, now with a median follow-up of 9 years and based on data from 4,690 women, showed that the 8-year rate of disease-free survival was 86.8% with exemestane plus OFS versus 82.8% with tamoxifen plus OFS (hazard ratio, 0.77; P = .0006), for a similar absolute benefit of 4.0%, reported Prudence Francis, MD, of the University of Melbourne, head of Medical Oncology in the Breast Service at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne.

In stratified analysis, absolute benefit tended to be greater among women in TEXT who received chemotherapy (6.0%); intermediate among women in TEXT who did not receive chemotherapy (3.7%) and women in SOFT who received prior chemotherapy (3.7%); and less among women in SOFT who did not receive chemotherapy (1.9%).

Exemestane plus OFS was also superior to tamoxifen plus OFS in terms of breast cancer–free interval, with an absolute 4.1% benefit (P = .0002), and distant recurrence–free interval, with an absolute 2.1% benefit (P = .02). Overall survival did not differ significantly between arms.

Among the 86% of patients with HER2-negative disease, exemestane plus OFS netted an absolute disease-free survival gain of 5.4% and an absolute distant recurrence–free interval gain of 3.4%. There was a consistent relative treatment benefit across subgroups, but larger absolute benefit, on the order of 5%-9%, in women given chemotherapy and in those younger than 35 years.

“Results for the HER2-positive subgroup require further investigation,” Dr. Francis said. “The trials enrolled both before and after the routine use of adjuvant trastuzumab, and a significant proportion of the patients with HER2-positive breast cancer did not receive adjuvant HER2-targeted therapy.”

In the entire joint-analysis population, exemestane plus OFS was associated with higher rates of musculoskeletal events of grade 3 or 4 (11% vs. 6%) and osteoporosis of grade 2-4 (15% vs. 7%), while tamoxifen plus OFS was associated with a higher rate of thrombosis/embolism of grade 2-4 (2.3% vs. 1.2%) and more cases of endometrial cancer (9 vs. 4 cases). At 4 years, early discontinuation of oral endocrine therapy was greater for exemestane than for tamoxifen (25% vs. 19%).

“After longer follow-up, with a median of 9 years, the combined analysis results confirm a statistically significant improvement in disease outcomes with exemestane plus ovarian suppression. As is critical given the long natural history of estrogen receptor–positive breast cancer, follow-up in these trials is currently continuing,” Dr. Francis summarized.

“To optimally translate the observed absolute trial improvements into clinical practice, oncologists need to discuss and weigh the potential benefits and toxicities in each individual patient who is premenopausal with hormone receptor–positive breast cancer,” she recommended.

Session attendee Hope S. Rugo, MD, of the University of California, San Francisco, Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, noted that exemestane had superior benefit despite the 25% rate of early discontinuation. “I wonder if one of the interpretations of that, given the toxicity of this therapy for very young women, is that we need some but maybe not so much. Maybe they don’t need 5 years altogether,” she said.

“The fact that they stopped their assigned endocrine therapy doesn’t mean that they didn’t continue any therapy. They may have switched over to tamoxifen or they may have decided they wanted to have a baby or there may have been many other things,” Dr. Francis replied, noting that analyses sorting out the reasons for early discontinuation are planned.

Session attendee Mark E. Sherman, MD, of the Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, Fla., asked, “Do you have any ability to test for tamoxifen metabolites? It’s possible that a third to a half of patients got reduced benefit from that drug.”

Banked samples are available and a substudy is planned, according to Dr. Francis. “We haven’t got data on that yet, but yes, we are analyzing that.”
 

 

 

SOFT update

Initial results of the SOFT trial, reported after a median follow-up of 5.6 years, showed that adding OFS to tamoxifen did not significantly improve disease-free survival over tamoxifen alone in the entire trial population (N Engl J Med. 2015;372:436-46). However, there was benefit for women who received chemotherapy and remained premenopausal.

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Key clinical point: Adjuvant endocrine therapies improve outcomes of premenopausal HR-positive breast cancer long term.

Major finding: In the joint TEXT-SOFT update, 8-year disease-free survival was superior with exemestane plus OFS versus tamoxifen plus OFS (86.8% vs. 82.8%; P = .0006). In the SOFT update, 8-year disease-free survival was superior with tamoxifen plus OFS versus tamoxifen alone (83.2% vs. 78.9%; P = .009).

Data source: Updated analyses of phase 3 trials among premenopausal women with HR-positive breast cancer: TEXT and SOFT joint analysis (n = 4,690; median 9-year follow-up) and SOFT analysis (n = 3,047; median 8-year follow-up).

Disclosures: Dr. Francis disclosed that she has received fees for non-CME services from AstraZeneca and has given an overseas lecture for Pfizer. Dr. Fleming disclosed that she had no relevant financial relationships with commercial interests. The trials received financial support from Pfizer and Ipsen.

Source: Francis et al. SABCS Abstract GS4-02; Fleming et al. SABCS Abstract GS4-03

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New tool predicts late distant recurrence of postmenopausal ER+ breast cancer

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– A new prognostic tool that uses four clinical and pathological variables may help to guide decisions about extending adjuvant endocrine therapy for postmenopausal women with estrogen receptor–positive (ER+) breast cancer, according to a study reported at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

ER+ breast cancer is well known for recurring long after endocrine therapy stops, but the risk varies widely, ranging from 10% to 40% (N Engl J Med. 2017;377:1836-46), noted lead investigator Ivana Sestak, MS, PhD, a lecturer in medical statistics at the Queen Mary University of London. “A few trials have shown that extended endocrine therapy can reduce the risk of recurrence, but careful assessment of potential side effects and actual risk of developing a late distant recurrence is essential,” she said.

Courtesy of Dr. Sestak
Dr. Ivana Sestak
The investigators developed and validated the new tool – called the Clinical Treatment Score post-5 years (CTS5) – among 11,446 postmenopausal women treated for ER+ breast cancer (with or without chemotherapy) who had completed 5 years of adjuvant endocrine therapy without any distant recurrence on the randomized ATAC and BIG 1-98 trials.

The investigators used the CTS5 to stratify patients into a low-risk group (risk of late distant recurrence less than 5%), an intermediate-risk group (risk between 5% and 10%), and a high-risk group (risk more than 10%). The observed rates of distant recurrence between years 5 and 10 were about 3% for the low-risk group, 7% for the intermediate-risk group, and 19% for the high risk-group. In addition, the CTS5 outperformed the original Clinical Treatment Score (CTS0), which was developed to predict recurrence between 0 and 10 years (J Clin Oncol. 2011;29:4273-8).

“We have developed a simple prognostic tool for the prediction of late distant recurrences which will help clinicians and their patients in the decision-making process about extended endocrine therapy,” Dr. Sestak commented. “The CTS5 was highly prognostic for the prediction of late distant recurrences and identified a large proportion of women, 42%, as low risk, where the value of extended endocrine therapy is limited. The CTS5 was also more prognostic than the already published CTS0 and should be used in this context for the prediction of late distant recurrence.”

“We aim to make the CTS5 algorithm and risk curve, with a read-out table, available to clinicians, and it will also be published in our manuscript,” she added.

Session attendee Frankie Ann Holmes, MD, of the Texas Oncology/US Oncology Network in Houston commented, “Just identifying high risk doesn’t necessarily translate into benefit, which is what we see with the Breast Cancer Index: You get the high risk, but then you learn if there is actually benefit to the extended therapy. Does your assay have a benefit portion to it?”

“No, we can’t look at the predictive benefit [with the CTS5]. This assay is purely a prognostic tool to predict late distant recurrences,” Dr. Sestak replied. “In these two trials, we do not have information on how many patients actually went on to extended endocrine therapy. You have to remember, these are old trials – they finished in about 2007-2008 – so not many women would have been given extended endocrine therapy at that time point.”

Session attendee Laura J. van’t Veer, PhD, of the University of California, San Francisco, asked, “How do you feel this will translate for risk up to 20 years, for which the question of extended endocrine therapy might also be very relevant?”

“For the purpose of this analysis, we only looked at out to 10 years. But I agree, it’s also important if we could apply a prognostic tool out to 20 years,” Dr. Sestak replied. “We have longer follow-up on some of the ATAC women, and we might look into that to see if we see any benefit of using a prognostic tool in the prediction of late distant recurrences.”
 

Study details

The investigators developed and trained the new tool using data from 4,735 women from the ATAC trial. They then validated the tool using data from 6,711 women from the BIG 1-98 trial.

The final CTS5 model contained four clinical variables, Dr. Sestak reported: number of involved nodes, size of the tumor, grade of the tumor, and age of the patient.

In the ATAC population, the CTS5 model did a better job than the original CTS0 model of predicting late distant recurrence. CTS5 improved the prediction of late distant recurrence by a factor of 2.47, whereas CTS0 improved the predictive value by a factor of 2.04. The CTS5 model performed similarly well regardless of whether patients had received chemotherapy.

In the BIG 1-98 population, the findings were much the same: The CTS5 model improved prediction of late distant recurrence by 2.07, while the CTS0 model improved prediction of late distant recurrence by 1.84. Performance of the CTS5 model was again similarly good regardless of whether patients had received chemotherapy.

Observed rates of distant recurrence between years 5 and 10 were similar in the ATAC and BIG 1-98 populations for the CTS5-defined low-risk group (2.5% and 3.0%, respectively), intermediate-risk group (7.7% and 6.9%), and the high-risk group (20.3% and 17.3%).

When the two trials’ populations were combined, the observed rate was 3.0% in the CTS5-defined low-risk group, 7.3% in the intermediate-risk group, and 18.9% in the high-risk group.

In addition, the main results held up among all node-negative women combined and among all women who had between one and three positive nodes combined. “For women with four or more positive lymph nodes, the CTS5 was not informative and categorized virtually all women into the high-risk group,” Dr. Sestak noted.

The investigators did not look at whether local or regional recurrences modulated the risk of late distant recurrence, she said. However, women who had experienced isolated local recurrence during the first 5 years would have been included in analysis.

“A strength of our study is that we used clinicopathological parameters that are measured in all breast cancer patients, and there is no need for further testing,” noted Dr. Sestak, who disclosed that she has received fees for advisory boards and lectures from Myriad Genetics.

On the other hand, it is unclear how the CTS5 would perform among premenopausal women and among women with HER2-positive disease given that two trials took place before routine HER2 testing and HER2-directed therapy were used.

SOURCE: Sestak I et al. SABCS 2017 Abstract GS6-01.

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– A new prognostic tool that uses four clinical and pathological variables may help to guide decisions about extending adjuvant endocrine therapy for postmenopausal women with estrogen receptor–positive (ER+) breast cancer, according to a study reported at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

ER+ breast cancer is well known for recurring long after endocrine therapy stops, but the risk varies widely, ranging from 10% to 40% (N Engl J Med. 2017;377:1836-46), noted lead investigator Ivana Sestak, MS, PhD, a lecturer in medical statistics at the Queen Mary University of London. “A few trials have shown that extended endocrine therapy can reduce the risk of recurrence, but careful assessment of potential side effects and actual risk of developing a late distant recurrence is essential,” she said.

Courtesy of Dr. Sestak
Dr. Ivana Sestak
The investigators developed and validated the new tool – called the Clinical Treatment Score post-5 years (CTS5) – among 11,446 postmenopausal women treated for ER+ breast cancer (with or without chemotherapy) who had completed 5 years of adjuvant endocrine therapy without any distant recurrence on the randomized ATAC and BIG 1-98 trials.

The investigators used the CTS5 to stratify patients into a low-risk group (risk of late distant recurrence less than 5%), an intermediate-risk group (risk between 5% and 10%), and a high-risk group (risk more than 10%). The observed rates of distant recurrence between years 5 and 10 were about 3% for the low-risk group, 7% for the intermediate-risk group, and 19% for the high risk-group. In addition, the CTS5 outperformed the original Clinical Treatment Score (CTS0), which was developed to predict recurrence between 0 and 10 years (J Clin Oncol. 2011;29:4273-8).

“We have developed a simple prognostic tool for the prediction of late distant recurrences which will help clinicians and their patients in the decision-making process about extended endocrine therapy,” Dr. Sestak commented. “The CTS5 was highly prognostic for the prediction of late distant recurrences and identified a large proportion of women, 42%, as low risk, where the value of extended endocrine therapy is limited. The CTS5 was also more prognostic than the already published CTS0 and should be used in this context for the prediction of late distant recurrence.”

“We aim to make the CTS5 algorithm and risk curve, with a read-out table, available to clinicians, and it will also be published in our manuscript,” she added.

Session attendee Frankie Ann Holmes, MD, of the Texas Oncology/US Oncology Network in Houston commented, “Just identifying high risk doesn’t necessarily translate into benefit, which is what we see with the Breast Cancer Index: You get the high risk, but then you learn if there is actually benefit to the extended therapy. Does your assay have a benefit portion to it?”

“No, we can’t look at the predictive benefit [with the CTS5]. This assay is purely a prognostic tool to predict late distant recurrences,” Dr. Sestak replied. “In these two trials, we do not have information on how many patients actually went on to extended endocrine therapy. You have to remember, these are old trials – they finished in about 2007-2008 – so not many women would have been given extended endocrine therapy at that time point.”

Session attendee Laura J. van’t Veer, PhD, of the University of California, San Francisco, asked, “How do you feel this will translate for risk up to 20 years, for which the question of extended endocrine therapy might also be very relevant?”

“For the purpose of this analysis, we only looked at out to 10 years. But I agree, it’s also important if we could apply a prognostic tool out to 20 years,” Dr. Sestak replied. “We have longer follow-up on some of the ATAC women, and we might look into that to see if we see any benefit of using a prognostic tool in the prediction of late distant recurrences.”
 

Study details

The investigators developed and trained the new tool using data from 4,735 women from the ATAC trial. They then validated the tool using data from 6,711 women from the BIG 1-98 trial.

The final CTS5 model contained four clinical variables, Dr. Sestak reported: number of involved nodes, size of the tumor, grade of the tumor, and age of the patient.

In the ATAC population, the CTS5 model did a better job than the original CTS0 model of predicting late distant recurrence. CTS5 improved the prediction of late distant recurrence by a factor of 2.47, whereas CTS0 improved the predictive value by a factor of 2.04. The CTS5 model performed similarly well regardless of whether patients had received chemotherapy.

In the BIG 1-98 population, the findings were much the same: The CTS5 model improved prediction of late distant recurrence by 2.07, while the CTS0 model improved prediction of late distant recurrence by 1.84. Performance of the CTS5 model was again similarly good regardless of whether patients had received chemotherapy.

Observed rates of distant recurrence between years 5 and 10 were similar in the ATAC and BIG 1-98 populations for the CTS5-defined low-risk group (2.5% and 3.0%, respectively), intermediate-risk group (7.7% and 6.9%), and the high-risk group (20.3% and 17.3%).

When the two trials’ populations were combined, the observed rate was 3.0% in the CTS5-defined low-risk group, 7.3% in the intermediate-risk group, and 18.9% in the high-risk group.

In addition, the main results held up among all node-negative women combined and among all women who had between one and three positive nodes combined. “For women with four or more positive lymph nodes, the CTS5 was not informative and categorized virtually all women into the high-risk group,” Dr. Sestak noted.

The investigators did not look at whether local or regional recurrences modulated the risk of late distant recurrence, she said. However, women who had experienced isolated local recurrence during the first 5 years would have been included in analysis.

“A strength of our study is that we used clinicopathological parameters that are measured in all breast cancer patients, and there is no need for further testing,” noted Dr. Sestak, who disclosed that she has received fees for advisory boards and lectures from Myriad Genetics.

On the other hand, it is unclear how the CTS5 would perform among premenopausal women and among women with HER2-positive disease given that two trials took place before routine HER2 testing and HER2-directed therapy were used.

SOURCE: Sestak I et al. SABCS 2017 Abstract GS6-01.

 

– A new prognostic tool that uses four clinical and pathological variables may help to guide decisions about extending adjuvant endocrine therapy for postmenopausal women with estrogen receptor–positive (ER+) breast cancer, according to a study reported at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

ER+ breast cancer is well known for recurring long after endocrine therapy stops, but the risk varies widely, ranging from 10% to 40% (N Engl J Med. 2017;377:1836-46), noted lead investigator Ivana Sestak, MS, PhD, a lecturer in medical statistics at the Queen Mary University of London. “A few trials have shown that extended endocrine therapy can reduce the risk of recurrence, but careful assessment of potential side effects and actual risk of developing a late distant recurrence is essential,” she said.

Courtesy of Dr. Sestak
Dr. Ivana Sestak
The investigators developed and validated the new tool – called the Clinical Treatment Score post-5 years (CTS5) – among 11,446 postmenopausal women treated for ER+ breast cancer (with or without chemotherapy) who had completed 5 years of adjuvant endocrine therapy without any distant recurrence on the randomized ATAC and BIG 1-98 trials.

The investigators used the CTS5 to stratify patients into a low-risk group (risk of late distant recurrence less than 5%), an intermediate-risk group (risk between 5% and 10%), and a high-risk group (risk more than 10%). The observed rates of distant recurrence between years 5 and 10 were about 3% for the low-risk group, 7% for the intermediate-risk group, and 19% for the high risk-group. In addition, the CTS5 outperformed the original Clinical Treatment Score (CTS0), which was developed to predict recurrence between 0 and 10 years (J Clin Oncol. 2011;29:4273-8).

“We have developed a simple prognostic tool for the prediction of late distant recurrences which will help clinicians and their patients in the decision-making process about extended endocrine therapy,” Dr. Sestak commented. “The CTS5 was highly prognostic for the prediction of late distant recurrences and identified a large proportion of women, 42%, as low risk, where the value of extended endocrine therapy is limited. The CTS5 was also more prognostic than the already published CTS0 and should be used in this context for the prediction of late distant recurrence.”

“We aim to make the CTS5 algorithm and risk curve, with a read-out table, available to clinicians, and it will also be published in our manuscript,” she added.

Session attendee Frankie Ann Holmes, MD, of the Texas Oncology/US Oncology Network in Houston commented, “Just identifying high risk doesn’t necessarily translate into benefit, which is what we see with the Breast Cancer Index: You get the high risk, but then you learn if there is actually benefit to the extended therapy. Does your assay have a benefit portion to it?”

“No, we can’t look at the predictive benefit [with the CTS5]. This assay is purely a prognostic tool to predict late distant recurrences,” Dr. Sestak replied. “In these two trials, we do not have information on how many patients actually went on to extended endocrine therapy. You have to remember, these are old trials – they finished in about 2007-2008 – so not many women would have been given extended endocrine therapy at that time point.”

Session attendee Laura J. van’t Veer, PhD, of the University of California, San Francisco, asked, “How do you feel this will translate for risk up to 20 years, for which the question of extended endocrine therapy might also be very relevant?”

“For the purpose of this analysis, we only looked at out to 10 years. But I agree, it’s also important if we could apply a prognostic tool out to 20 years,” Dr. Sestak replied. “We have longer follow-up on some of the ATAC women, and we might look into that to see if we see any benefit of using a prognostic tool in the prediction of late distant recurrences.”
 

Study details

The investigators developed and trained the new tool using data from 4,735 women from the ATAC trial. They then validated the tool using data from 6,711 women from the BIG 1-98 trial.

The final CTS5 model contained four clinical variables, Dr. Sestak reported: number of involved nodes, size of the tumor, grade of the tumor, and age of the patient.

In the ATAC population, the CTS5 model did a better job than the original CTS0 model of predicting late distant recurrence. CTS5 improved the prediction of late distant recurrence by a factor of 2.47, whereas CTS0 improved the predictive value by a factor of 2.04. The CTS5 model performed similarly well regardless of whether patients had received chemotherapy.

In the BIG 1-98 population, the findings were much the same: The CTS5 model improved prediction of late distant recurrence by 2.07, while the CTS0 model improved prediction of late distant recurrence by 1.84. Performance of the CTS5 model was again similarly good regardless of whether patients had received chemotherapy.

Observed rates of distant recurrence between years 5 and 10 were similar in the ATAC and BIG 1-98 populations for the CTS5-defined low-risk group (2.5% and 3.0%, respectively), intermediate-risk group (7.7% and 6.9%), and the high-risk group (20.3% and 17.3%).

When the two trials’ populations were combined, the observed rate was 3.0% in the CTS5-defined low-risk group, 7.3% in the intermediate-risk group, and 18.9% in the high-risk group.

In addition, the main results held up among all node-negative women combined and among all women who had between one and three positive nodes combined. “For women with four or more positive lymph nodes, the CTS5 was not informative and categorized virtually all women into the high-risk group,” Dr. Sestak noted.

The investigators did not look at whether local or regional recurrences modulated the risk of late distant recurrence, she said. However, women who had experienced isolated local recurrence during the first 5 years would have been included in analysis.

“A strength of our study is that we used clinicopathological parameters that are measured in all breast cancer patients, and there is no need for further testing,” noted Dr. Sestak, who disclosed that she has received fees for advisory boards and lectures from Myriad Genetics.

On the other hand, it is unclear how the CTS5 would perform among premenopausal women and among women with HER2-positive disease given that two trials took place before routine HER2 testing and HER2-directed therapy were used.

SOURCE: Sestak I et al. SABCS 2017 Abstract GS6-01.

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Key clinical point: The CTS5 prognostic tool uses clinical and pathological data to predict late distant recurrence of postmenopausal ER+ breast cancer.

Major finding: The tool stratified patients for risk of distant recurrence between years 5 and 10 as low risk (less than 5% risk), intermediate risk (5%-10% risk), and high risk (more than 10% risk).

Data source: A cohort study of 11,446 postmenopausal women with early-stage breast cancer who were free of distant recurrence after 5 years of adjuvant endocrine therapy.

Disclosures: Dr. Sestak disclosed that she has received fees for advisory boards and lectures from Myriad Genetics.

Source: Sestak I et al. SABCS 2017 Abstract GS6-01.

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EndoPredict results reflected tumor response to neoadjuvant therapy

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– The results of the EndoPredict test appear to predict tumor response in patients with early hormone receptor–positive, HER2-negative breast cancer given neoadjuvant therapy, based on results of a study conducted by the Austrian Breast & Colorectal Cancer Study Group (ABCSG).

“Very good tumor shrinkage in estrogen receptor–positive, HER2-negative disease is going to happen only in a minority of patients, and biomarkers that would predict excellent tumor shrinkage are an unmet medical need,” commented lead investigator Peter Dubsky, MD, PhD, who is head of the Breast Center at Hirslanden Klinik St. Anna, Lucerne, Switzerland. “As a surgeon, that would help me to predict breast conservation at diagnosis, but as a surgical oncologist, I would also recognize that tumor response is an important component of future survival.”

SABCS/Scott Morgan 2017
Dr. Peter Dubsky


The ABCSG findings suggest expanded utility for EndoPredict. The test’s molecular score is currently used along with tumor size and nodal status to predict the 10-year distant recurrence rate, and whether patients may safely forgo chemotherapy or are at high risk and may need adjuvant chemotherapy in addition to endocrine therapy.

Dr. Dubsky and his coinvestigators assessed performance of the EndoPredict test among 217 patients treated on ABCSG 34, a randomized phase 2 neoadjuvant trial. Findings showed that among patients given neoadjuvant endocrine therapy because they had less aggressive disease features, an EndoPredict high-risk result was associated with poor response (negative predictive value of 92%), defined as a residual cancer burden (RCB) of II or III, he reported at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

On the other hand, among patients given neoadjuvant chemotherapy because they had more aggressive disease features, a low-risk result was associated with poor response (negative predictive value of 100%).

“Clinicians really gave us two distinct cohorts within ABCSG 34. In the luminal A–type patients who were treated with neoendocrine therapy, a high EndoPredict score predicted a low chance of tumor shrinkage. In the more aggressive ER-positive tumors, so-called luminal B type, treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy, there was absolutely no excellent response in the low-risk group,” Dr. Dubsky summarized. “We believe that this molecular score may contribute to patient selection for biomarker-driven studies, especially in the neoadjuvant setting.”

Session attendee Steven Vogl, MD, a medical oncologist with the Montefiore Medical Center in New York, commented, “I have trouble correlating an RCB of 0 or I with what you as a surgeon do for the patient, because you are talking about pathologic complete response or just a few cells there. That’s not what determines how much breast you take off: It’s determined by the total size of the tumor and the size of the breast. So if it’s less than a few centimeters, I’m sure you can do a lumpectomy in every patient. Tell me why I should care that you are getting an RCB of 0 or I in these endocrine patients.”

“Because it’s more likely that these patients will have a smaller tumor and better tumor shrinkage,” Dr. Dubsky replied. “You are of course right, RCB 0 or I was not designed to help surgeons. But it helps me as a translational scientist to have a surrogate and an exact classification for good tumor shrinkage. That’s how I used it.”

C. Kent Osborne, MD, codirector of SABCS and director of the Dan L. Duncan Cancer Center at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, asked, “We see it in the clinic, and I’m sure you have as well, patients whose tumor doesn’t shrink very much, but the Ki-67 really drops. And that may or may not be a better factor than the actual tumor shrinkage. So how many patients who had tumors that didn’t shrink, which was your endpoint, had a reduction in Ki-67 that was, say, 5%?”

“We haven’t looked at that specifically, but we will do so as we carry on with the follow-up of these patients. Then we can learn more about the prognosis,” Dr. Dubsky replied.
 

Study details

ABCSG 34 was a randomized phase 2 trial testing addition of the cancer vaccine tecemotide (Stimuvax) to neoadjuvant standard of care among patients with HER2-negative early breast cancer.

Dr. Dubsky and coinvestigators restricted analyses to patients with hormone receptor–positive disease who, depending on clinical and pathologic factors, received neoadjuvant chemotherapy (eight cycles of epirubicin-cyclophosphamide and docetaxel) or neoadjuvant endocrine therapy (6 months of letrozole [Femara]) as standard of care. They were then randomized to additionally receive tecemotide or not before undergoing surgery.

Overall, 25% of the 134 patients in the neoadjuvant chemotherapy group had a good tumor response, defined as pathologic complete response in both breast and nodes (RCB of 0) or minimal residual disease (RCB of I).

Higher EndoPredict score was associated with greater likelihood of good response to chemotherapy. EndoPredict risk group (high vs. low) had a negative predictive value of 100%, a positive predictive value of 26.4%, a true-positive rate of 100%, and a true-negative rate of 8.9% for predicting response (P = .112).

Area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.736.

In a multivariate model, EndoPredict score as a continuous variable was not an independent predictor of response. “The good response was largely driven by covariates that included cell proliferation, and it was Ki-67 that was significant,” Dr. Dubsky noted.

Overall, 18% of the 83 patients in the neoadjuvant endocrine therapy group had a good tumor response (RCB of 0 or I). Here, lower EndoPredict score was associated with greater likelihood of good response. EndoPredict risk group (high vs. low) had a negative predictive value of 92.3%, a positive predictive value of 27.3%, a true-positive rate of 80.0%, and a true-negative rate of 52.9% for predicting response (P = .024). Area under the curve was 0.726.

In a multivariate model here, EndoPredict score as a continuous variable, its estrogen receptor–signaling/differentiation component, and Ki-67 did not independently predict response. “It was maybe a bit surprising that T stage was the strongest factor, possibly indicating that we should have simply treated those women longer than 6 months,” Dr. Dubsky commented. The EndoPredict proliferation component was also a significant predictor.

“Possibly, the very narrow distribution of Ki-67 [among patients given neoendocrine therapy] may have prevented this factor from playing a bigger role in this particular model,” he speculated.

Dr. Dubsky disclosed that he receives consulting fees from Myriad, the maker of EndoPredict, and from Cepheid, Nanostring, and Amgen.

 

 

SOURCE: Dubsky P et al. SABCS 2017 Abstract GS6-04.

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– The results of the EndoPredict test appear to predict tumor response in patients with early hormone receptor–positive, HER2-negative breast cancer given neoadjuvant therapy, based on results of a study conducted by the Austrian Breast & Colorectal Cancer Study Group (ABCSG).

“Very good tumor shrinkage in estrogen receptor–positive, HER2-negative disease is going to happen only in a minority of patients, and biomarkers that would predict excellent tumor shrinkage are an unmet medical need,” commented lead investigator Peter Dubsky, MD, PhD, who is head of the Breast Center at Hirslanden Klinik St. Anna, Lucerne, Switzerland. “As a surgeon, that would help me to predict breast conservation at diagnosis, but as a surgical oncologist, I would also recognize that tumor response is an important component of future survival.”

SABCS/Scott Morgan 2017
Dr. Peter Dubsky


The ABCSG findings suggest expanded utility for EndoPredict. The test’s molecular score is currently used along with tumor size and nodal status to predict the 10-year distant recurrence rate, and whether patients may safely forgo chemotherapy or are at high risk and may need adjuvant chemotherapy in addition to endocrine therapy.

Dr. Dubsky and his coinvestigators assessed performance of the EndoPredict test among 217 patients treated on ABCSG 34, a randomized phase 2 neoadjuvant trial. Findings showed that among patients given neoadjuvant endocrine therapy because they had less aggressive disease features, an EndoPredict high-risk result was associated with poor response (negative predictive value of 92%), defined as a residual cancer burden (RCB) of II or III, he reported at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

On the other hand, among patients given neoadjuvant chemotherapy because they had more aggressive disease features, a low-risk result was associated with poor response (negative predictive value of 100%).

“Clinicians really gave us two distinct cohorts within ABCSG 34. In the luminal A–type patients who were treated with neoendocrine therapy, a high EndoPredict score predicted a low chance of tumor shrinkage. In the more aggressive ER-positive tumors, so-called luminal B type, treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy, there was absolutely no excellent response in the low-risk group,” Dr. Dubsky summarized. “We believe that this molecular score may contribute to patient selection for biomarker-driven studies, especially in the neoadjuvant setting.”

Session attendee Steven Vogl, MD, a medical oncologist with the Montefiore Medical Center in New York, commented, “I have trouble correlating an RCB of 0 or I with what you as a surgeon do for the patient, because you are talking about pathologic complete response or just a few cells there. That’s not what determines how much breast you take off: It’s determined by the total size of the tumor and the size of the breast. So if it’s less than a few centimeters, I’m sure you can do a lumpectomy in every patient. Tell me why I should care that you are getting an RCB of 0 or I in these endocrine patients.”

“Because it’s more likely that these patients will have a smaller tumor and better tumor shrinkage,” Dr. Dubsky replied. “You are of course right, RCB 0 or I was not designed to help surgeons. But it helps me as a translational scientist to have a surrogate and an exact classification for good tumor shrinkage. That’s how I used it.”

C. Kent Osborne, MD, codirector of SABCS and director of the Dan L. Duncan Cancer Center at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, asked, “We see it in the clinic, and I’m sure you have as well, patients whose tumor doesn’t shrink very much, but the Ki-67 really drops. And that may or may not be a better factor than the actual tumor shrinkage. So how many patients who had tumors that didn’t shrink, which was your endpoint, had a reduction in Ki-67 that was, say, 5%?”

“We haven’t looked at that specifically, but we will do so as we carry on with the follow-up of these patients. Then we can learn more about the prognosis,” Dr. Dubsky replied.
 

Study details

ABCSG 34 was a randomized phase 2 trial testing addition of the cancer vaccine tecemotide (Stimuvax) to neoadjuvant standard of care among patients with HER2-negative early breast cancer.

Dr. Dubsky and coinvestigators restricted analyses to patients with hormone receptor–positive disease who, depending on clinical and pathologic factors, received neoadjuvant chemotherapy (eight cycles of epirubicin-cyclophosphamide and docetaxel) or neoadjuvant endocrine therapy (6 months of letrozole [Femara]) as standard of care. They were then randomized to additionally receive tecemotide or not before undergoing surgery.

Overall, 25% of the 134 patients in the neoadjuvant chemotherapy group had a good tumor response, defined as pathologic complete response in both breast and nodes (RCB of 0) or minimal residual disease (RCB of I).

Higher EndoPredict score was associated with greater likelihood of good response to chemotherapy. EndoPredict risk group (high vs. low) had a negative predictive value of 100%, a positive predictive value of 26.4%, a true-positive rate of 100%, and a true-negative rate of 8.9% for predicting response (P = .112).

Area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.736.

In a multivariate model, EndoPredict score as a continuous variable was not an independent predictor of response. “The good response was largely driven by covariates that included cell proliferation, and it was Ki-67 that was significant,” Dr. Dubsky noted.

Overall, 18% of the 83 patients in the neoadjuvant endocrine therapy group had a good tumor response (RCB of 0 or I). Here, lower EndoPredict score was associated with greater likelihood of good response. EndoPredict risk group (high vs. low) had a negative predictive value of 92.3%, a positive predictive value of 27.3%, a true-positive rate of 80.0%, and a true-negative rate of 52.9% for predicting response (P = .024). Area under the curve was 0.726.

In a multivariate model here, EndoPredict score as a continuous variable, its estrogen receptor–signaling/differentiation component, and Ki-67 did not independently predict response. “It was maybe a bit surprising that T stage was the strongest factor, possibly indicating that we should have simply treated those women longer than 6 months,” Dr. Dubsky commented. The EndoPredict proliferation component was also a significant predictor.

“Possibly, the very narrow distribution of Ki-67 [among patients given neoendocrine therapy] may have prevented this factor from playing a bigger role in this particular model,” he speculated.

Dr. Dubsky disclosed that he receives consulting fees from Myriad, the maker of EndoPredict, and from Cepheid, Nanostring, and Amgen.

 

 

SOURCE: Dubsky P et al. SABCS 2017 Abstract GS6-04.

 

– The results of the EndoPredict test appear to predict tumor response in patients with early hormone receptor–positive, HER2-negative breast cancer given neoadjuvant therapy, based on results of a study conducted by the Austrian Breast & Colorectal Cancer Study Group (ABCSG).

“Very good tumor shrinkage in estrogen receptor–positive, HER2-negative disease is going to happen only in a minority of patients, and biomarkers that would predict excellent tumor shrinkage are an unmet medical need,” commented lead investigator Peter Dubsky, MD, PhD, who is head of the Breast Center at Hirslanden Klinik St. Anna, Lucerne, Switzerland. “As a surgeon, that would help me to predict breast conservation at diagnosis, but as a surgical oncologist, I would also recognize that tumor response is an important component of future survival.”

SABCS/Scott Morgan 2017
Dr. Peter Dubsky


The ABCSG findings suggest expanded utility for EndoPredict. The test’s molecular score is currently used along with tumor size and nodal status to predict the 10-year distant recurrence rate, and whether patients may safely forgo chemotherapy or are at high risk and may need adjuvant chemotherapy in addition to endocrine therapy.

Dr. Dubsky and his coinvestigators assessed performance of the EndoPredict test among 217 patients treated on ABCSG 34, a randomized phase 2 neoadjuvant trial. Findings showed that among patients given neoadjuvant endocrine therapy because they had less aggressive disease features, an EndoPredict high-risk result was associated with poor response (negative predictive value of 92%), defined as a residual cancer burden (RCB) of II or III, he reported at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

On the other hand, among patients given neoadjuvant chemotherapy because they had more aggressive disease features, a low-risk result was associated with poor response (negative predictive value of 100%).

“Clinicians really gave us two distinct cohorts within ABCSG 34. In the luminal A–type patients who were treated with neoendocrine therapy, a high EndoPredict score predicted a low chance of tumor shrinkage. In the more aggressive ER-positive tumors, so-called luminal B type, treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy, there was absolutely no excellent response in the low-risk group,” Dr. Dubsky summarized. “We believe that this molecular score may contribute to patient selection for biomarker-driven studies, especially in the neoadjuvant setting.”

Session attendee Steven Vogl, MD, a medical oncologist with the Montefiore Medical Center in New York, commented, “I have trouble correlating an RCB of 0 or I with what you as a surgeon do for the patient, because you are talking about pathologic complete response or just a few cells there. That’s not what determines how much breast you take off: It’s determined by the total size of the tumor and the size of the breast. So if it’s less than a few centimeters, I’m sure you can do a lumpectomy in every patient. Tell me why I should care that you are getting an RCB of 0 or I in these endocrine patients.”

“Because it’s more likely that these patients will have a smaller tumor and better tumor shrinkage,” Dr. Dubsky replied. “You are of course right, RCB 0 or I was not designed to help surgeons. But it helps me as a translational scientist to have a surrogate and an exact classification for good tumor shrinkage. That’s how I used it.”

C. Kent Osborne, MD, codirector of SABCS and director of the Dan L. Duncan Cancer Center at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, asked, “We see it in the clinic, and I’m sure you have as well, patients whose tumor doesn’t shrink very much, but the Ki-67 really drops. And that may or may not be a better factor than the actual tumor shrinkage. So how many patients who had tumors that didn’t shrink, which was your endpoint, had a reduction in Ki-67 that was, say, 5%?”

“We haven’t looked at that specifically, but we will do so as we carry on with the follow-up of these patients. Then we can learn more about the prognosis,” Dr. Dubsky replied.
 

Study details

ABCSG 34 was a randomized phase 2 trial testing addition of the cancer vaccine tecemotide (Stimuvax) to neoadjuvant standard of care among patients with HER2-negative early breast cancer.

Dr. Dubsky and coinvestigators restricted analyses to patients with hormone receptor–positive disease who, depending on clinical and pathologic factors, received neoadjuvant chemotherapy (eight cycles of epirubicin-cyclophosphamide and docetaxel) or neoadjuvant endocrine therapy (6 months of letrozole [Femara]) as standard of care. They were then randomized to additionally receive tecemotide or not before undergoing surgery.

Overall, 25% of the 134 patients in the neoadjuvant chemotherapy group had a good tumor response, defined as pathologic complete response in both breast and nodes (RCB of 0) or minimal residual disease (RCB of I).

Higher EndoPredict score was associated with greater likelihood of good response to chemotherapy. EndoPredict risk group (high vs. low) had a negative predictive value of 100%, a positive predictive value of 26.4%, a true-positive rate of 100%, and a true-negative rate of 8.9% for predicting response (P = .112).

Area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.736.

In a multivariate model, EndoPredict score as a continuous variable was not an independent predictor of response. “The good response was largely driven by covariates that included cell proliferation, and it was Ki-67 that was significant,” Dr. Dubsky noted.

Overall, 18% of the 83 patients in the neoadjuvant endocrine therapy group had a good tumor response (RCB of 0 or I). Here, lower EndoPredict score was associated with greater likelihood of good response. EndoPredict risk group (high vs. low) had a negative predictive value of 92.3%, a positive predictive value of 27.3%, a true-positive rate of 80.0%, and a true-negative rate of 52.9% for predicting response (P = .024). Area under the curve was 0.726.

In a multivariate model here, EndoPredict score as a continuous variable, its estrogen receptor–signaling/differentiation component, and Ki-67 did not independently predict response. “It was maybe a bit surprising that T stage was the strongest factor, possibly indicating that we should have simply treated those women longer than 6 months,” Dr. Dubsky commented. The EndoPredict proliferation component was also a significant predictor.

“Possibly, the very narrow distribution of Ki-67 [among patients given neoendocrine therapy] may have prevented this factor from playing a bigger role in this particular model,” he speculated.

Dr. Dubsky disclosed that he receives consulting fees from Myriad, the maker of EndoPredict, and from Cepheid, Nanostring, and Amgen.

 

 

SOURCE: Dubsky P et al. SABCS 2017 Abstract GS6-04.

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Key clinical point: The results of the EndoPredict test appear to predict tumor response in patients with early hormone receptor–positive, HER2-negative breast cancer given neoadjuvant therapy.

Major finding: EndoPredict predicted poor tumor shrinkage in patients given neoadjuvant endocrine therapy (high-risk test result NPV, 92%) or neoadjuvant chemotherapy (low-risk test result NPV, 100%).

Data source: A cohort study of 217 patients with HR–positive, HER2-negative breast cancer enrolled in a phase 2 trial of neoadjuvant therapy (ABCSG 34).

Disclosures: Dr. Dubsky disclosed that he receives consulting fees from Cepheid, Myriad, Nanostring, and Amgen.

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Wider margins may reduce recurrence risk in early breast cancer

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– A margin width beyond ‘no tumor on ink’ may reduce local recurrence in certain subsets of patients undergoing breast-conserving treatment for early-stage breast cancer, according to findings from a meta-analysis.

SOURCE: Vicini et al. SABCS Abstract GS5-01

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– A margin width beyond ‘no tumor on ink’ may reduce local recurrence in certain subsets of patients undergoing breast-conserving treatment for early-stage breast cancer, according to findings from a meta-analysis.

SOURCE: Vicini et al. SABCS Abstract GS5-01

 

– A margin width beyond ‘no tumor on ink’ may reduce local recurrence in certain subsets of patients undergoing breast-conserving treatment for early-stage breast cancer, according to findings from a meta-analysis.

SOURCE: Vicini et al. SABCS Abstract GS5-01

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Key clinical point: Margin widths of at least 2 mm are associated with a reduced risk of ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence versus narrower but uninvolved margins.

Major finding: Crude rates of local recurrence decreased as the margin distance increased: 7.2% for patients with margins 0-2 mm, 3.6% for margins of 2-5 mm, and 3.2% for margins wider than 5 mm (P less than .001 for each).

Data source: Meta-analysis of 38 studies with a total cohort of 55,302 patients treated during 1968-2010.

Disclosures: Study funding was not disclosed. The authors have no relevant disclosures.

Source: Vicini et al. SABCS Abstract GS5-01

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Enzalutamide plus exemestane improves PFS in HR+ breast cancer subset

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– Enzalutamide added to exemestane improved progression-free survival (PFS) in patients with hormone receptor (HR)-positive advanced breast cancer, investigators reported.

Specifically, it improved outcomes in patients who had not received any prior endocrine therapy and who were positive for a gene signature-based biomarker indicating androgen receptor (AR) signaling.

Patients in this subset who were treated with combination enzalutamide and exemestane achieved a median PFS of 16.5 months, which was significantly higher than the 4 months observed with placebo and exemestane.

However, the addition of enzalutamide had no effect on PFS in the overall cohort or among patients who were biomarker positive but who had received prior endocrine therapy.

“The study met its primary endpoint in improving PFS in the enzalutamide plus exemestane-treated patients who were biomarker positive and HR positive with no prior endocrine therapy for advanced disease as compared [with] exemestane alone,” Denise A. Yardley, MD, of Tennessee Oncology, Nashville, said at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

“The role of the AR in HR-positive breast cancer and the predictive value of the identified biomarker are still unclear and will require further studies and validation,” said Dr. Yardley.

Dr. Denise A. Yardley


Targeting AR is an active area of breast cancer research, as a majority of HR-positive tumors express the AR, as do a moderate number of HER2-positive tumors and almost a third of triple-negative breast cancers. AR signaling has also been associated with resistance to endocrine therapy. Aromatase inhibitors divert estrogen precursors to androgens and data from preclinical models have shown that enzalutamide blocked both estrogen- and androgen-mediated growth of HR+ cells.

Enzalutamide is an inhibitor of AR signaling that is currently used to treat patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer, and has demonstrated clinical activity and was well tolerated in patients with AR-positive advanced triple negative breast cancer, explained Dr. Yardley.

In this study, Dr. Yardley and her colleagues conducted a placebo-controlled phase 2 randomized trial that included 247 patients with HR+/HER2-normal advanced/metastatic breast cancer who were assigned to either 25 mg exemestane plus placebo or 50 mg exemestane and 160 mg enzalutamide daily.

The patients were divided into two parallel cohorts: those with no prior endocrine therapy (C1; n = 127) or those who had received one prior endocrine therapy for metastatic disease (C2; n = 120).

The primary endpoint was PFS in the intent-to-treat population and in the biomarker subgroup of each cohort. Secondary endpoints included the clinical benefit rate at 24 weeks, best overall response, and safety.

The authors found that the PFS in the intent-to-treat population did not significantly differ between those randomized to enzalutamide or placebo in either cohort. In cohort 1, the median PFS was 11.8 months in the enzalutamide arm and 5.8 months in the placebo arm (hazard ratio, 0.82; P = .3631), and in cohort 2, 3.6 months and 3.9 months, respectively (HR, 1.02; P = .9212).

However, statistically significant improvements in median PFS and clinical benefit rate at 24 weeks were observed only in the group with a positive biomarker who had not received any prior endocrine therapy. In cohort 1, the median PFS was 16.5 months in the enzalutamide arm vs. 4.3 months in the placebo arm (HR, 0.44, P = .0335). In cohort 2, median PFS did not significantly differ between groups (6.0 vs. 5.3 months; HR, 0.55; P = .1936).

The clinical response rate in cohort 1 of the biomarker positive group was 83% in the enzalutamide arm versus 38% in the placebo arm (P = .0012).

Adverse events with enzalutamide was similar to those previously reported, and the most common were nausea (39%) in cohort 1 and fatigue (37%) in cohort 2. Dose interruptions due to adverse events occurred in 21.0% and 25.0% of patients randomized to enzalutamide in cohorts 1 and 2 vs. 20.6% and 15.0% in the placebo group.

Dr. Yardley explained that the biomarker used in the study was identified on PAM50. “It was exploratory and proprietary,” she noted, adding that she is unable to share any further information about it at this time.

SOURCE: Yardley et al. SABCS Abstract GS4-07

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– Enzalutamide added to exemestane improved progression-free survival (PFS) in patients with hormone receptor (HR)-positive advanced breast cancer, investigators reported.

Specifically, it improved outcomes in patients who had not received any prior endocrine therapy and who were positive for a gene signature-based biomarker indicating androgen receptor (AR) signaling.

Patients in this subset who were treated with combination enzalutamide and exemestane achieved a median PFS of 16.5 months, which was significantly higher than the 4 months observed with placebo and exemestane.

However, the addition of enzalutamide had no effect on PFS in the overall cohort or among patients who were biomarker positive but who had received prior endocrine therapy.

“The study met its primary endpoint in improving PFS in the enzalutamide plus exemestane-treated patients who were biomarker positive and HR positive with no prior endocrine therapy for advanced disease as compared [with] exemestane alone,” Denise A. Yardley, MD, of Tennessee Oncology, Nashville, said at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

“The role of the AR in HR-positive breast cancer and the predictive value of the identified biomarker are still unclear and will require further studies and validation,” said Dr. Yardley.

Dr. Denise A. Yardley


Targeting AR is an active area of breast cancer research, as a majority of HR-positive tumors express the AR, as do a moderate number of HER2-positive tumors and almost a third of triple-negative breast cancers. AR signaling has also been associated with resistance to endocrine therapy. Aromatase inhibitors divert estrogen precursors to androgens and data from preclinical models have shown that enzalutamide blocked both estrogen- and androgen-mediated growth of HR+ cells.

Enzalutamide is an inhibitor of AR signaling that is currently used to treat patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer, and has demonstrated clinical activity and was well tolerated in patients with AR-positive advanced triple negative breast cancer, explained Dr. Yardley.

In this study, Dr. Yardley and her colleagues conducted a placebo-controlled phase 2 randomized trial that included 247 patients with HR+/HER2-normal advanced/metastatic breast cancer who were assigned to either 25 mg exemestane plus placebo or 50 mg exemestane and 160 mg enzalutamide daily.

The patients were divided into two parallel cohorts: those with no prior endocrine therapy (C1; n = 127) or those who had received one prior endocrine therapy for metastatic disease (C2; n = 120).

The primary endpoint was PFS in the intent-to-treat population and in the biomarker subgroup of each cohort. Secondary endpoints included the clinical benefit rate at 24 weeks, best overall response, and safety.

The authors found that the PFS in the intent-to-treat population did not significantly differ between those randomized to enzalutamide or placebo in either cohort. In cohort 1, the median PFS was 11.8 months in the enzalutamide arm and 5.8 months in the placebo arm (hazard ratio, 0.82; P = .3631), and in cohort 2, 3.6 months and 3.9 months, respectively (HR, 1.02; P = .9212).

However, statistically significant improvements in median PFS and clinical benefit rate at 24 weeks were observed only in the group with a positive biomarker who had not received any prior endocrine therapy. In cohort 1, the median PFS was 16.5 months in the enzalutamide arm vs. 4.3 months in the placebo arm (HR, 0.44, P = .0335). In cohort 2, median PFS did not significantly differ between groups (6.0 vs. 5.3 months; HR, 0.55; P = .1936).

The clinical response rate in cohort 1 of the biomarker positive group was 83% in the enzalutamide arm versus 38% in the placebo arm (P = .0012).

Adverse events with enzalutamide was similar to those previously reported, and the most common were nausea (39%) in cohort 1 and fatigue (37%) in cohort 2. Dose interruptions due to adverse events occurred in 21.0% and 25.0% of patients randomized to enzalutamide in cohorts 1 and 2 vs. 20.6% and 15.0% in the placebo group.

Dr. Yardley explained that the biomarker used in the study was identified on PAM50. “It was exploratory and proprietary,” she noted, adding that she is unable to share any further information about it at this time.

SOURCE: Yardley et al. SABCS Abstract GS4-07

 

– Enzalutamide added to exemestane improved progression-free survival (PFS) in patients with hormone receptor (HR)-positive advanced breast cancer, investigators reported.

Specifically, it improved outcomes in patients who had not received any prior endocrine therapy and who were positive for a gene signature-based biomarker indicating androgen receptor (AR) signaling.

Patients in this subset who were treated with combination enzalutamide and exemestane achieved a median PFS of 16.5 months, which was significantly higher than the 4 months observed with placebo and exemestane.

However, the addition of enzalutamide had no effect on PFS in the overall cohort or among patients who were biomarker positive but who had received prior endocrine therapy.

“The study met its primary endpoint in improving PFS in the enzalutamide plus exemestane-treated patients who were biomarker positive and HR positive with no prior endocrine therapy for advanced disease as compared [with] exemestane alone,” Denise A. Yardley, MD, of Tennessee Oncology, Nashville, said at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

“The role of the AR in HR-positive breast cancer and the predictive value of the identified biomarker are still unclear and will require further studies and validation,” said Dr. Yardley.

Dr. Denise A. Yardley


Targeting AR is an active area of breast cancer research, as a majority of HR-positive tumors express the AR, as do a moderate number of HER2-positive tumors and almost a third of triple-negative breast cancers. AR signaling has also been associated with resistance to endocrine therapy. Aromatase inhibitors divert estrogen precursors to androgens and data from preclinical models have shown that enzalutamide blocked both estrogen- and androgen-mediated growth of HR+ cells.

Enzalutamide is an inhibitor of AR signaling that is currently used to treat patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer, and has demonstrated clinical activity and was well tolerated in patients with AR-positive advanced triple negative breast cancer, explained Dr. Yardley.

In this study, Dr. Yardley and her colleagues conducted a placebo-controlled phase 2 randomized trial that included 247 patients with HR+/HER2-normal advanced/metastatic breast cancer who were assigned to either 25 mg exemestane plus placebo or 50 mg exemestane and 160 mg enzalutamide daily.

The patients were divided into two parallel cohorts: those with no prior endocrine therapy (C1; n = 127) or those who had received one prior endocrine therapy for metastatic disease (C2; n = 120).

The primary endpoint was PFS in the intent-to-treat population and in the biomarker subgroup of each cohort. Secondary endpoints included the clinical benefit rate at 24 weeks, best overall response, and safety.

The authors found that the PFS in the intent-to-treat population did not significantly differ between those randomized to enzalutamide or placebo in either cohort. In cohort 1, the median PFS was 11.8 months in the enzalutamide arm and 5.8 months in the placebo arm (hazard ratio, 0.82; P = .3631), and in cohort 2, 3.6 months and 3.9 months, respectively (HR, 1.02; P = .9212).

However, statistically significant improvements in median PFS and clinical benefit rate at 24 weeks were observed only in the group with a positive biomarker who had not received any prior endocrine therapy. In cohort 1, the median PFS was 16.5 months in the enzalutamide arm vs. 4.3 months in the placebo arm (HR, 0.44, P = .0335). In cohort 2, median PFS did not significantly differ between groups (6.0 vs. 5.3 months; HR, 0.55; P = .1936).

The clinical response rate in cohort 1 of the biomarker positive group was 83% in the enzalutamide arm versus 38% in the placebo arm (P = .0012).

Adverse events with enzalutamide was similar to those previously reported, and the most common were nausea (39%) in cohort 1 and fatigue (37%) in cohort 2. Dose interruptions due to adverse events occurred in 21.0% and 25.0% of patients randomized to enzalutamide in cohorts 1 and 2 vs. 20.6% and 15.0% in the placebo group.

Dr. Yardley explained that the biomarker used in the study was identified on PAM50. “It was exploratory and proprietary,” she noted, adding that she is unable to share any further information about it at this time.

SOURCE: Yardley et al. SABCS Abstract GS4-07

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Key clinical point: Enzalutamide added to exemestane improves progression-free survival in hormone receptor–positive advanced breast cancer patients with a biomarker indicating androgen receptor signaling.

Major finding: In this subset of patients, combination therapy improved PFS: 16.5 months vs. 4.3 months for the placebo arm (HR 0.44, P = .0335).

Data source: A placebo-controlled phase 2 randomized trial comprising 247 patients with HR+/HER2-normal advanced/metastatic breast cancer.

Disclosures: Study funding was not disclosed.

Source: Yardley et al. SABCS Abstract GS4-07.

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Lapatinib plus trastuzumab improves outcomes in HER2+ breast cancer

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SAN ANTONIO – Dual HER2 targeting with lapatinib added to 16 weeks of trastuzumab significantly improved event-free survival (EFS), compared with trastuzumab alone, among women with HER2-positive breast cancer.

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SAN ANTONIO – Dual HER2 targeting with lapatinib added to 16 weeks of trastuzumab significantly improved event-free survival (EFS), compared with trastuzumab alone, among women with HER2-positive breast cancer.

 

SAN ANTONIO – Dual HER2 targeting with lapatinib added to 16 weeks of trastuzumab significantly improved event-free survival (EFS), compared with trastuzumab alone, among women with HER2-positive breast cancer.

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Key clinical point: In contrast to previous trials, lapatinib added to a trastuzumab/taxane regimen significantly improved event-free survival in women with HER2+ breast cancer.

Major finding: Event-free survival was significantly longer in the dual HER2 blockade arm versus trastuzumab alone (HR, 0.35; 95% CI, 0.15-0.84; P = .013).

Data source: Phase 3 randomized trial that included 305 women with HER2+ breast cancer.

Disclosures: The study was sponsored by the Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology. Dr. Krop reports relationships with Genentech/Roche and MacroGenics.

Source: Krop IE et al. SABCS 2017 Abstract GS3-02.

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Axillary node dissection can be avoided with limited SLN involvement

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SAN ANTONIO – Axillary dissection can be avoided in patients with early breast cancer and limited sentinel node involvement, investigators reported at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

SOURCE: Galimberti et al. SABCS Abstract GS5-02

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SAN ANTONIO – Axillary dissection can be avoided in patients with early breast cancer and limited sentinel node involvement, investigators reported at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

SOURCE: Galimberti et al. SABCS Abstract GS5-02

 

SAN ANTONIO – Axillary dissection can be avoided in patients with early breast cancer and limited sentinel node involvement, investigators reported at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

SOURCE: Galimberti et al. SABCS Abstract GS5-02

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Key clinical point: Axillary dissection can be avoided in patients with early breast cancer and limited sentinel node involvement.

Major finding: At 10 years the disease-free rates were 77% for the no–axillary dissection group and 75% for the axillary dissection group (HR [no-AD vs. AD], 0.85; 95% CI, 0.65-1.11; log-rank P = .23; noninferiority P = .002).

Data source: Updated results of the phase 3 IBCSG 23-01 study, a multicenter, randomized, noninferiority trial that included 934 participants.

Disclosures: The study received no outside funding and the authors had no disclosures.

Source: Galimberti et al. SABCS Abstract GS5-02.

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ERBB2 expression predicts pCR in HER2+ breast cancer

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SAN ANTONIO – Among patients receiving trastuzumab plus lapatinib neoadjuvant therapy for HER2-positive early breast cancer, amplification of ERBB2 was predictive of a pathologic complete response (pCR), according to findings presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

However, ERBB2 mRNA expression and PAM50-enriched HER2 better predicted pCR, said lead study author Cristos Sotiriou, MD, of the Breast Cancer Translational Research Laboratory at the Institut Jules Bordet in Belgium

High genomic instability was associated with a higher pCR rate in patients with estrogen receptor–positive tumors, but copy number alterations (CNAs) were not associated with event-free survival (EFS).

In the large phase 3 NeoALTTO trial, lapatinib combined with trastuzumab in the neoadjuvant setting nearly doubled the pCR rate as compared with either agent used alone. The 3-year EFS was also improved with dual HER2 blockage versus single HER2 therapy (84% for the combination, hazard ratio, 0.78; P = .33 vs. 78% for lapatinib alone and 76% for trastuzumab alone, HR, 1.06; P = .81 for both).

The researchers of this trial also found that pCR was a surrogate for long-term outcome.

“Expression of ERBB2, ESR1, and immune signatures were the main drivers of pCR,” said Dr. Sotiriou.

The main goal of the current study was to investigate the relevance of CNAs for pCR and EFS in this population. A total of 455 patients were enrolled in the NeoALTTO study, and of this cohort, 270 had tumor content that was sufficient to assay for CNAs. Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes and gene expression were also obtained and the genome instability index was calculated, and 184 samples were included in the final analysis.

Of the cancer genes, only ERBB2 was predictive of pCR.

A total of 159 recurrent CNA regions were identified. ERBB2 amplification was associated with high pCR (P = .0007), but less than ERBB2 expression, and it lost its significance after correcting for ERBB2 expression.

The genome instability index (GII) was defined as the “median absolute deviation of the normalized copy number” and independent of ERBB2 amplification, the pCR rate increased with the GII (P = .03.

Amplification of two regions on 6q23-24 was significantly associated with higher pCR (P = .00005 and P = .00087). One of the segments harbored 39 genes, some with an expression level that was also predictive of pCR. The 6q23-24 segment was associated with pCR in estrogen receptor–positive tumors only (interaction test P = .04).

After multiple testing correction, there were no amplified regions or genes found to be predictive of EFS.

“A novel amplified region on 6q23-24 was shown to be predictive of pCR, in particular for estrogen receptor–positive tumors,” said Dr. Sotiriou. “This may warrant further investigation.”

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SAN ANTONIO – Among patients receiving trastuzumab plus lapatinib neoadjuvant therapy for HER2-positive early breast cancer, amplification of ERBB2 was predictive of a pathologic complete response (pCR), according to findings presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

However, ERBB2 mRNA expression and PAM50-enriched HER2 better predicted pCR, said lead study author Cristos Sotiriou, MD, of the Breast Cancer Translational Research Laboratory at the Institut Jules Bordet in Belgium

High genomic instability was associated with a higher pCR rate in patients with estrogen receptor–positive tumors, but copy number alterations (CNAs) were not associated with event-free survival (EFS).

In the large phase 3 NeoALTTO trial, lapatinib combined with trastuzumab in the neoadjuvant setting nearly doubled the pCR rate as compared with either agent used alone. The 3-year EFS was also improved with dual HER2 blockage versus single HER2 therapy (84% for the combination, hazard ratio, 0.78; P = .33 vs. 78% for lapatinib alone and 76% for trastuzumab alone, HR, 1.06; P = .81 for both).

The researchers of this trial also found that pCR was a surrogate for long-term outcome.

“Expression of ERBB2, ESR1, and immune signatures were the main drivers of pCR,” said Dr. Sotiriou.

The main goal of the current study was to investigate the relevance of CNAs for pCR and EFS in this population. A total of 455 patients were enrolled in the NeoALTTO study, and of this cohort, 270 had tumor content that was sufficient to assay for CNAs. Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes and gene expression were also obtained and the genome instability index was calculated, and 184 samples were included in the final analysis.

Of the cancer genes, only ERBB2 was predictive of pCR.

A total of 159 recurrent CNA regions were identified. ERBB2 amplification was associated with high pCR (P = .0007), but less than ERBB2 expression, and it lost its significance after correcting for ERBB2 expression.

The genome instability index (GII) was defined as the “median absolute deviation of the normalized copy number” and independent of ERBB2 amplification, the pCR rate increased with the GII (P = .03.

Amplification of two regions on 6q23-24 was significantly associated with higher pCR (P = .00005 and P = .00087). One of the segments harbored 39 genes, some with an expression level that was also predictive of pCR. The 6q23-24 segment was associated with pCR in estrogen receptor–positive tumors only (interaction test P = .04).

After multiple testing correction, there were no amplified regions or genes found to be predictive of EFS.

“A novel amplified region on 6q23-24 was shown to be predictive of pCR, in particular for estrogen receptor–positive tumors,” said Dr. Sotiriou. “This may warrant further investigation.”

 

SAN ANTONIO – Among patients receiving trastuzumab plus lapatinib neoadjuvant therapy for HER2-positive early breast cancer, amplification of ERBB2 was predictive of a pathologic complete response (pCR), according to findings presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

However, ERBB2 mRNA expression and PAM50-enriched HER2 better predicted pCR, said lead study author Cristos Sotiriou, MD, of the Breast Cancer Translational Research Laboratory at the Institut Jules Bordet in Belgium

High genomic instability was associated with a higher pCR rate in patients with estrogen receptor–positive tumors, but copy number alterations (CNAs) were not associated with event-free survival (EFS).

In the large phase 3 NeoALTTO trial, lapatinib combined with trastuzumab in the neoadjuvant setting nearly doubled the pCR rate as compared with either agent used alone. The 3-year EFS was also improved with dual HER2 blockage versus single HER2 therapy (84% for the combination, hazard ratio, 0.78; P = .33 vs. 78% for lapatinib alone and 76% for trastuzumab alone, HR, 1.06; P = .81 for both).

The researchers of this trial also found that pCR was a surrogate for long-term outcome.

“Expression of ERBB2, ESR1, and immune signatures were the main drivers of pCR,” said Dr. Sotiriou.

The main goal of the current study was to investigate the relevance of CNAs for pCR and EFS in this population. A total of 455 patients were enrolled in the NeoALTTO study, and of this cohort, 270 had tumor content that was sufficient to assay for CNAs. Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes and gene expression were also obtained and the genome instability index was calculated, and 184 samples were included in the final analysis.

Of the cancer genes, only ERBB2 was predictive of pCR.

A total of 159 recurrent CNA regions were identified. ERBB2 amplification was associated with high pCR (P = .0007), but less than ERBB2 expression, and it lost its significance after correcting for ERBB2 expression.

The genome instability index (GII) was defined as the “median absolute deviation of the normalized copy number” and independent of ERBB2 amplification, the pCR rate increased with the GII (P = .03.

Amplification of two regions on 6q23-24 was significantly associated with higher pCR (P = .00005 and P = .00087). One of the segments harbored 39 genes, some with an expression level that was also predictive of pCR. The 6q23-24 segment was associated with pCR in estrogen receptor–positive tumors only (interaction test P = .04).

After multiple testing correction, there were no amplified regions or genes found to be predictive of EFS.

“A novel amplified region on 6q23-24 was shown to be predictive of pCR, in particular for estrogen receptor–positive tumors,” said Dr. Sotiriou. “This may warrant further investigation.”

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Key clinical point: ERBB2 mRNA expression and PAM50-enriched HER2 better predicted pathologic complete response than did EEBB2 amplification.

Major finding: Of the cancer genes, only ERBB2 was predictive of pCR, and amplification of two regions on 6q23-24 was significantly associated with higher pCR (P = .00005 and P = .00087).

Data source: An analysis of the large phase 3 NeoALTTO trial, in which lapatinib was combined with trastuzumab in the neoadjuvant setting to investigate the relevance of copy number alterations on outcome.

Disclosures: The NeoALTTO trial was funded by GlaxoSmithKline. Dr. Sotiriou did not make any disclosures.

Source: Sotiriou et al. SABCS Abstract GS1-04

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DCIS risk signature is validated in SweDCIS population

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– A biological risk signature can help guide decisions about use of adjuvant radiation therapy in patients with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), suggests a validation study reported at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

Radiation therapy reduces the 10-year risk of any ipsilateral recurrence in this population by about 50% as established in a large overview of trials (J Natl Cancer Inst Monogr. 2010;2010:162-77), noted lead investigator Fredrik Wärnberg, MD, PhD, of Uppsala Academic Hospital, Uppsala University, Sweden. But factors such as tumor size, grade, and margins have not been helpful in identifying patients most likely to benefit.

Dr. Fredrik Wärnberg
He and his colleagues validated a biological risk signature (DCISionRT; PreludeDx) among 584 patients with pure primary DCIS treated on the SweDCIS trial. The trial randomized patients who had undergone breast-conserving surgery to receive radiation therapy or not, and then followed them for 20 years.

The risk signature incorporates four clinicopathologic factors and seven immunohistochemically assessed biomarkers of hormone receptor status, HER2 status, stress response, and proliferation. Possible scores range from 0 to 10, and are split into categories of low risk (0 to 3) and elevated risk (greater than 3). “To me, the magic of this signature is that it is nonlinear. Each factor can be dependent on the value of other factors in the model,” Dr. Wärnberg said.

Results of the validation study showed that among the 506 patients who had clear margins after surgery, radiation therapy significantly reduced the 10-year risk of invasive recurrence in those with an elevated risk score by more than three-fourths, but not in those with a low risk score.

“The biologic risk signature … correlated to risk. It’s prognostic, that’s nothing new,” he summarized. “More interestingly, it was also predictive for radiotherapy benefit. Not all patient groups had the same benefit from radiation therapy. In the low-risk group, there wasn’t any significant benefit from radiation therapy for invasive recurrences. But in the elevated risk group, the radiation therapy benefit was twice as high as expected – about a 76% relative risk reduction with radiotherapy for invasive recurrences.”

Study details

Main results from the SweDCIS trial, previously reported (J Clin Oncol. 2014;32:3613-8), showed that adjuvant radiation therapy reduced recurrences, yielding a 12% absolute reduction in risk of ipsilateral recurrence (10% for in situ recurrences and 2% for invasive recurrences).

For the validation study, Dr. Wärnberg and his colleagues were able to obtain tissue and biological signature results, blinded to patient outcome, for 56% of the original trial population. About half of patients each were determined to have low risk scores and elevated risk scores.

Among the 506 patients with clear margins, the score, analyzed as a continuous variable, was associated with risk of any (in situ or invasive) ipsilateral recurrence during follow-up (hazard ratio, 1.49 per 5-unit increase; P = .038).

In a multivariate model, receipt of radiation therapy was associated with a 52% relative reduction in 10-year risk of any ipsilateral recurrence for those with a low-risk score (HR, 0.48; P = .04) and a greater 69% relative reduction for those with an elevated risk score (HR, 0.31; P less than .001).

Radiation therapy did not significantly reduce the risk of ipsilateral invasive recurrence in the low risk group (HR, 0.84; P = .70), but it did in the elevated risk group (HR, 0.24; P = .012).

These findings essentially mirrored those of a 2015 validation study in a separate cohort of 526 patients from Uppsala University Hospital and the University of Massachusetts, according to Dr. Wärnberg. “We found highly consistent data with these two different sets,” he said.

Analyses additionally showed that radiation therapy reduced the 10-year risk of an invasive breast cancer recurrence by an absolute 1% for patients with low risk scores (not significant) but by an absolute 9% for patients with elevated risk scores (P = .012).

Dr. Wärnberg disclosed that he had no relevant conflicts of interest. The study was funded in part by PreludeDx.

SOURCE: Warnberg et al., SABCS Abstract GS5-08

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– A biological risk signature can help guide decisions about use of adjuvant radiation therapy in patients with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), suggests a validation study reported at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

Radiation therapy reduces the 10-year risk of any ipsilateral recurrence in this population by about 50% as established in a large overview of trials (J Natl Cancer Inst Monogr. 2010;2010:162-77), noted lead investigator Fredrik Wärnberg, MD, PhD, of Uppsala Academic Hospital, Uppsala University, Sweden. But factors such as tumor size, grade, and margins have not been helpful in identifying patients most likely to benefit.

Dr. Fredrik Wärnberg
He and his colleagues validated a biological risk signature (DCISionRT; PreludeDx) among 584 patients with pure primary DCIS treated on the SweDCIS trial. The trial randomized patients who had undergone breast-conserving surgery to receive radiation therapy or not, and then followed them for 20 years.

The risk signature incorporates four clinicopathologic factors and seven immunohistochemically assessed biomarkers of hormone receptor status, HER2 status, stress response, and proliferation. Possible scores range from 0 to 10, and are split into categories of low risk (0 to 3) and elevated risk (greater than 3). “To me, the magic of this signature is that it is nonlinear. Each factor can be dependent on the value of other factors in the model,” Dr. Wärnberg said.

Results of the validation study showed that among the 506 patients who had clear margins after surgery, radiation therapy significantly reduced the 10-year risk of invasive recurrence in those with an elevated risk score by more than three-fourths, but not in those with a low risk score.

“The biologic risk signature … correlated to risk. It’s prognostic, that’s nothing new,” he summarized. “More interestingly, it was also predictive for radiotherapy benefit. Not all patient groups had the same benefit from radiation therapy. In the low-risk group, there wasn’t any significant benefit from radiation therapy for invasive recurrences. But in the elevated risk group, the radiation therapy benefit was twice as high as expected – about a 76% relative risk reduction with radiotherapy for invasive recurrences.”

Study details

Main results from the SweDCIS trial, previously reported (J Clin Oncol. 2014;32:3613-8), showed that adjuvant radiation therapy reduced recurrences, yielding a 12% absolute reduction in risk of ipsilateral recurrence (10% for in situ recurrences and 2% for invasive recurrences).

For the validation study, Dr. Wärnberg and his colleagues were able to obtain tissue and biological signature results, blinded to patient outcome, for 56% of the original trial population. About half of patients each were determined to have low risk scores and elevated risk scores.

Among the 506 patients with clear margins, the score, analyzed as a continuous variable, was associated with risk of any (in situ or invasive) ipsilateral recurrence during follow-up (hazard ratio, 1.49 per 5-unit increase; P = .038).

In a multivariate model, receipt of radiation therapy was associated with a 52% relative reduction in 10-year risk of any ipsilateral recurrence for those with a low-risk score (HR, 0.48; P = .04) and a greater 69% relative reduction for those with an elevated risk score (HR, 0.31; P less than .001).

Radiation therapy did not significantly reduce the risk of ipsilateral invasive recurrence in the low risk group (HR, 0.84; P = .70), but it did in the elevated risk group (HR, 0.24; P = .012).

These findings essentially mirrored those of a 2015 validation study in a separate cohort of 526 patients from Uppsala University Hospital and the University of Massachusetts, according to Dr. Wärnberg. “We found highly consistent data with these two different sets,” he said.

Analyses additionally showed that radiation therapy reduced the 10-year risk of an invasive breast cancer recurrence by an absolute 1% for patients with low risk scores (not significant) but by an absolute 9% for patients with elevated risk scores (P = .012).

Dr. Wärnberg disclosed that he had no relevant conflicts of interest. The study was funded in part by PreludeDx.

SOURCE: Warnberg et al., SABCS Abstract GS5-08

 

– A biological risk signature can help guide decisions about use of adjuvant radiation therapy in patients with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), suggests a validation study reported at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

Radiation therapy reduces the 10-year risk of any ipsilateral recurrence in this population by about 50% as established in a large overview of trials (J Natl Cancer Inst Monogr. 2010;2010:162-77), noted lead investigator Fredrik Wärnberg, MD, PhD, of Uppsala Academic Hospital, Uppsala University, Sweden. But factors such as tumor size, grade, and margins have not been helpful in identifying patients most likely to benefit.

Dr. Fredrik Wärnberg
He and his colleagues validated a biological risk signature (DCISionRT; PreludeDx) among 584 patients with pure primary DCIS treated on the SweDCIS trial. The trial randomized patients who had undergone breast-conserving surgery to receive radiation therapy or not, and then followed them for 20 years.

The risk signature incorporates four clinicopathologic factors and seven immunohistochemically assessed biomarkers of hormone receptor status, HER2 status, stress response, and proliferation. Possible scores range from 0 to 10, and are split into categories of low risk (0 to 3) and elevated risk (greater than 3). “To me, the magic of this signature is that it is nonlinear. Each factor can be dependent on the value of other factors in the model,” Dr. Wärnberg said.

Results of the validation study showed that among the 506 patients who had clear margins after surgery, radiation therapy significantly reduced the 10-year risk of invasive recurrence in those with an elevated risk score by more than three-fourths, but not in those with a low risk score.

“The biologic risk signature … correlated to risk. It’s prognostic, that’s nothing new,” he summarized. “More interestingly, it was also predictive for radiotherapy benefit. Not all patient groups had the same benefit from radiation therapy. In the low-risk group, there wasn’t any significant benefit from radiation therapy for invasive recurrences. But in the elevated risk group, the radiation therapy benefit was twice as high as expected – about a 76% relative risk reduction with radiotherapy for invasive recurrences.”

Study details

Main results from the SweDCIS trial, previously reported (J Clin Oncol. 2014;32:3613-8), showed that adjuvant radiation therapy reduced recurrences, yielding a 12% absolute reduction in risk of ipsilateral recurrence (10% for in situ recurrences and 2% for invasive recurrences).

For the validation study, Dr. Wärnberg and his colleagues were able to obtain tissue and biological signature results, blinded to patient outcome, for 56% of the original trial population. About half of patients each were determined to have low risk scores and elevated risk scores.

Among the 506 patients with clear margins, the score, analyzed as a continuous variable, was associated with risk of any (in situ or invasive) ipsilateral recurrence during follow-up (hazard ratio, 1.49 per 5-unit increase; P = .038).

In a multivariate model, receipt of radiation therapy was associated with a 52% relative reduction in 10-year risk of any ipsilateral recurrence for those with a low-risk score (HR, 0.48; P = .04) and a greater 69% relative reduction for those with an elevated risk score (HR, 0.31; P less than .001).

Radiation therapy did not significantly reduce the risk of ipsilateral invasive recurrence in the low risk group (HR, 0.84; P = .70), but it did in the elevated risk group (HR, 0.24; P = .012).

These findings essentially mirrored those of a 2015 validation study in a separate cohort of 526 patients from Uppsala University Hospital and the University of Massachusetts, according to Dr. Wärnberg. “We found highly consistent data with these two different sets,” he said.

Analyses additionally showed that radiation therapy reduced the 10-year risk of an invasive breast cancer recurrence by an absolute 1% for patients with low risk scores (not significant) but by an absolute 9% for patients with elevated risk scores (P = .012).

Dr. Wärnberg disclosed that he had no relevant conflicts of interest. The study was funded in part by PreludeDx.

SOURCE: Warnberg et al., SABCS Abstract GS5-08

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Key clinical point: The biologic risk signature was both prognostic and predictive of radiation therapy benefit.

Major finding: Among patients with clear margins, radiation therapy significantly reduced 10-year risk of invasive recurrence in those with an elevated risk score (hazard ratio, 0.24; P = .012) but not in those with a low risk score (HR, 0.84; P = .70).

Data source: A validation study in 584 patients with DCIS from a randomized trial of radiation therapy (SweDCIS).

Disclosures: Dr. Wärnberg disclosed that he had no relevant conflicts of interest. The study was funded in part by PreludeDx.

Source: Warnberg et al., SABCS Abstract GS5-08

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Postmenopausal women who shed pounds see lower breast cancer risk

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– Postmenopausal women may be able to lower their risk of invasive breast cancer by simply losing some weight, according to an analysis of the large prospective Women’s Health Initiative Observational Study.

“While obesity is an established risk factor for postmenopausal breast cancer, studies of weight loss and breast cancer provide inconsistent results. It’s been very, very difficult to show that losing weight changes breast cancer incidence,” said lead investigator Rowan T. Chlebowski, MD, PhD, research professor in the department of medical oncology and therapeutics research at City of Hope in Duarte, Calif. “Consequently, the current public health message is limited to ‘avoid body fatness’ [N Engl J Med. 2016;375:794-8]. That’s not a very strong public health message.”

Susan London/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Rowan T. Chlebowski
He and his coinvestigators assessed changes in study participants’ weight during the first 3 years and then ascertained their invasive breast cancer risk after a median follow-up of 11.4 years.

Results showed that compared with peers whose weight remained stable, women who lost at least 5% of their body weight (an average of about 17-20 pounds) had a significant 12% reduction in breast cancer risk, Dr. Chlebowski reported in a session and press briefing at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. Benefit was similar whether the weight loss was intentional or not, and whether women were normal weight, overweight, or obese at baseline.

“These findings suggest that interventions in postmenopausal women designed to generate weight loss may reduce breast cancer risk. I feel these are very optimistic findings in that they provide a lesson to postmenopausal women that even a moderate degree of weight loss may be associated with health benefits,” he said. “This is a relatively new finding, and I think it should have public health implications.”

Parsing the findings

“I hope that you can present this to general doctors rather than oncologists because those are the ones seeing healthy women, by and large,” said press briefing moderator C. Kent Osborne, MD, codirector of SABCS and director of the Dan L. Duncan Cancer Center at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. “But in my patients, I’ve always suggested that they lose weight. Most of them with breast cancer are overweight, it seems. And I always had to do it because of diabetes and other factors. Now we can do it because we have a breast cancer endpoint that also suggests that losing weight will help with that as well.”

Susan London/Frontline Medical News
Dr. C. Kent Osborne
In discussions among the investigators about implementing the study’s findings via weight loss counseling and intervention, reimbursement was identified as an ongoing concern, Dr. Chlebowski noted. “Certainly, oncologists do not get any money for encouraging this or taking any steps to implement this. So that’s another battle that needs to be conducted.”

Additional results from the study showed that women who experienced a weight gain of at least 5% did not have a significantly elevated risk of breast cancer overall.

“Do you think that the women who gained a little bit of weight didn’t have an increase in incidence because they were already overweight?” Dr. Osborne asked.

“When we go over all these very complex mechanisms and the different drivers, there’s probably a threshold. So obesity’s association with inflammatory factors, I think that’s a driver to a certain degree. But then something else takes over, or maybe the main driver takes over,” Dr. Chlebowski replied. “We don’t have enough data to decide exactly what that threshold is, but that’s the ongoing hypothesis.”

In the session, attendee Daniel McGrail, PhD, of the MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, asked, “Since this [risk reduction with weight loss] occurred regardless of initial [body mass index], and you have all these covariates accounted for, does that imply that actually caloric deficits or decreasing caloric intake could be preventing breast cancer risk regardless of initial weight or any other parameters?”

“In all these western diseases, what we take for normal is probably less normal than it might have been 250 years ago or thousands of years ago when we were eating berries and being chased by animals,” Dr. Chlebowski replied. “So this raises a question as to whether the normal weight cutoff should be an ideal weight for western cancer prevention.”

Study details

The Women’s Health Initiative Observational Study recruited 93,676 postmenopausal women aged 50-79 years from 40 U.S. clinical centers during 1993-1998. The women had measurements taken of height and weight at baseline and at year 3 for calculation of BMI, and were asked about intentionality of any weight loss during that period.

 

 

Analyses were based on 61,335 women who had normal or higher body weight and were cancer free at baseline, survived at least 3 years, and had adequate data.

Overall, about 13.3% of women lost at least 5% of their body weight between baseline and year 3; 7.9% did so intentionally, losing an average of 19.6 pounds, and 5.5% did so unintentionally, losing an average of 16.9 pounds.

“We used the 5% decrease because this level has been shown to change some biochemical markers potentially associated with cancer. And it has been shown in a different study population, a randomized trial, to reduce the frequency of diabetes,” Dr. Chlebowski noted.

“There was nothing that the study did to induce the weight loss. And based on a partial look at the data, it doesn’t look like many of the women went to some kind of program to lose weight. So it was probably self-directed weight loss,” he noted. “Interestingly, the body mass index of this group was 29.9, so they were on the verge of going into obesity. We wondered in retrospect whether that was a motivating factor for them.”

In multivariate analysis, relative to peers having a stable weight over time, the women losing at least 5% of their weight had a lower risk of breast cancer (hazard ratio, 0.88; 95% confidence interval, 0.78-0.98; P = .02).

Findings were unchanged after further adjustment for mammography frequency. In addition, risk reduction was statistically indistinguishable whether the weight loss was intentional or not (P = .2 for interaction), and whether women were normal weight, overweight, or obese at baseline (P = .4 for interaction).

The 19.6% of women who had a weight gain of at least 5% did not have a significantly elevated risk of breast cancer overall, but they did have a significantly elevated risk of triple-negative breast cancer (HR, 1.54; 95% CI, 1.16-2.05). “We really don’t have a good explanation for this,” Dr. Chlebowski said.

Tackling the global obesity epidemic by conventional means to reduce cancer risk is an uphill battle, he concluded. “We are going to be looking for possible mediating factors. If you can find the mediating factors, pharmacologic intervention would have a much greater chance of success.”

Dr. Chlebowski disclosed that he had no relevant conflicts of interest. Research was supported by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute; National Institutes of Health; Department of Health and Human Services; and American Institute for Cancer Research.

SOURCE: Chlebowski et al., SABCS 2017 Abstract GS5-07

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– Postmenopausal women may be able to lower their risk of invasive breast cancer by simply losing some weight, according to an analysis of the large prospective Women’s Health Initiative Observational Study.

“While obesity is an established risk factor for postmenopausal breast cancer, studies of weight loss and breast cancer provide inconsistent results. It’s been very, very difficult to show that losing weight changes breast cancer incidence,” said lead investigator Rowan T. Chlebowski, MD, PhD, research professor in the department of medical oncology and therapeutics research at City of Hope in Duarte, Calif. “Consequently, the current public health message is limited to ‘avoid body fatness’ [N Engl J Med. 2016;375:794-8]. That’s not a very strong public health message.”

Susan London/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Rowan T. Chlebowski
He and his coinvestigators assessed changes in study participants’ weight during the first 3 years and then ascertained their invasive breast cancer risk after a median follow-up of 11.4 years.

Results showed that compared with peers whose weight remained stable, women who lost at least 5% of their body weight (an average of about 17-20 pounds) had a significant 12% reduction in breast cancer risk, Dr. Chlebowski reported in a session and press briefing at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. Benefit was similar whether the weight loss was intentional or not, and whether women were normal weight, overweight, or obese at baseline.

“These findings suggest that interventions in postmenopausal women designed to generate weight loss may reduce breast cancer risk. I feel these are very optimistic findings in that they provide a lesson to postmenopausal women that even a moderate degree of weight loss may be associated with health benefits,” he said. “This is a relatively new finding, and I think it should have public health implications.”

Parsing the findings

“I hope that you can present this to general doctors rather than oncologists because those are the ones seeing healthy women, by and large,” said press briefing moderator C. Kent Osborne, MD, codirector of SABCS and director of the Dan L. Duncan Cancer Center at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. “But in my patients, I’ve always suggested that they lose weight. Most of them with breast cancer are overweight, it seems. And I always had to do it because of diabetes and other factors. Now we can do it because we have a breast cancer endpoint that also suggests that losing weight will help with that as well.”

Susan London/Frontline Medical News
Dr. C. Kent Osborne
In discussions among the investigators about implementing the study’s findings via weight loss counseling and intervention, reimbursement was identified as an ongoing concern, Dr. Chlebowski noted. “Certainly, oncologists do not get any money for encouraging this or taking any steps to implement this. So that’s another battle that needs to be conducted.”

Additional results from the study showed that women who experienced a weight gain of at least 5% did not have a significantly elevated risk of breast cancer overall.

“Do you think that the women who gained a little bit of weight didn’t have an increase in incidence because they were already overweight?” Dr. Osborne asked.

“When we go over all these very complex mechanisms and the different drivers, there’s probably a threshold. So obesity’s association with inflammatory factors, I think that’s a driver to a certain degree. But then something else takes over, or maybe the main driver takes over,” Dr. Chlebowski replied. “We don’t have enough data to decide exactly what that threshold is, but that’s the ongoing hypothesis.”

In the session, attendee Daniel McGrail, PhD, of the MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, asked, “Since this [risk reduction with weight loss] occurred regardless of initial [body mass index], and you have all these covariates accounted for, does that imply that actually caloric deficits or decreasing caloric intake could be preventing breast cancer risk regardless of initial weight or any other parameters?”

“In all these western diseases, what we take for normal is probably less normal than it might have been 250 years ago or thousands of years ago when we were eating berries and being chased by animals,” Dr. Chlebowski replied. “So this raises a question as to whether the normal weight cutoff should be an ideal weight for western cancer prevention.”

Study details

The Women’s Health Initiative Observational Study recruited 93,676 postmenopausal women aged 50-79 years from 40 U.S. clinical centers during 1993-1998. The women had measurements taken of height and weight at baseline and at year 3 for calculation of BMI, and were asked about intentionality of any weight loss during that period.

 

 

Analyses were based on 61,335 women who had normal or higher body weight and were cancer free at baseline, survived at least 3 years, and had adequate data.

Overall, about 13.3% of women lost at least 5% of their body weight between baseline and year 3; 7.9% did so intentionally, losing an average of 19.6 pounds, and 5.5% did so unintentionally, losing an average of 16.9 pounds.

“We used the 5% decrease because this level has been shown to change some biochemical markers potentially associated with cancer. And it has been shown in a different study population, a randomized trial, to reduce the frequency of diabetes,” Dr. Chlebowski noted.

“There was nothing that the study did to induce the weight loss. And based on a partial look at the data, it doesn’t look like many of the women went to some kind of program to lose weight. So it was probably self-directed weight loss,” he noted. “Interestingly, the body mass index of this group was 29.9, so they were on the verge of going into obesity. We wondered in retrospect whether that was a motivating factor for them.”

In multivariate analysis, relative to peers having a stable weight over time, the women losing at least 5% of their weight had a lower risk of breast cancer (hazard ratio, 0.88; 95% confidence interval, 0.78-0.98; P = .02).

Findings were unchanged after further adjustment for mammography frequency. In addition, risk reduction was statistically indistinguishable whether the weight loss was intentional or not (P = .2 for interaction), and whether women were normal weight, overweight, or obese at baseline (P = .4 for interaction).

The 19.6% of women who had a weight gain of at least 5% did not have a significantly elevated risk of breast cancer overall, but they did have a significantly elevated risk of triple-negative breast cancer (HR, 1.54; 95% CI, 1.16-2.05). “We really don’t have a good explanation for this,” Dr. Chlebowski said.

Tackling the global obesity epidemic by conventional means to reduce cancer risk is an uphill battle, he concluded. “We are going to be looking for possible mediating factors. If you can find the mediating factors, pharmacologic intervention would have a much greater chance of success.”

Dr. Chlebowski disclosed that he had no relevant conflicts of interest. Research was supported by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute; National Institutes of Health; Department of Health and Human Services; and American Institute for Cancer Research.

SOURCE: Chlebowski et al., SABCS 2017 Abstract GS5-07

 

– Postmenopausal women may be able to lower their risk of invasive breast cancer by simply losing some weight, according to an analysis of the large prospective Women’s Health Initiative Observational Study.

“While obesity is an established risk factor for postmenopausal breast cancer, studies of weight loss and breast cancer provide inconsistent results. It’s been very, very difficult to show that losing weight changes breast cancer incidence,” said lead investigator Rowan T. Chlebowski, MD, PhD, research professor in the department of medical oncology and therapeutics research at City of Hope in Duarte, Calif. “Consequently, the current public health message is limited to ‘avoid body fatness’ [N Engl J Med. 2016;375:794-8]. That’s not a very strong public health message.”

Susan London/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Rowan T. Chlebowski
He and his coinvestigators assessed changes in study participants’ weight during the first 3 years and then ascertained their invasive breast cancer risk after a median follow-up of 11.4 years.

Results showed that compared with peers whose weight remained stable, women who lost at least 5% of their body weight (an average of about 17-20 pounds) had a significant 12% reduction in breast cancer risk, Dr. Chlebowski reported in a session and press briefing at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. Benefit was similar whether the weight loss was intentional or not, and whether women were normal weight, overweight, or obese at baseline.

“These findings suggest that interventions in postmenopausal women designed to generate weight loss may reduce breast cancer risk. I feel these are very optimistic findings in that they provide a lesson to postmenopausal women that even a moderate degree of weight loss may be associated with health benefits,” he said. “This is a relatively new finding, and I think it should have public health implications.”

Parsing the findings

“I hope that you can present this to general doctors rather than oncologists because those are the ones seeing healthy women, by and large,” said press briefing moderator C. Kent Osborne, MD, codirector of SABCS and director of the Dan L. Duncan Cancer Center at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. “But in my patients, I’ve always suggested that they lose weight. Most of them with breast cancer are overweight, it seems. And I always had to do it because of diabetes and other factors. Now we can do it because we have a breast cancer endpoint that also suggests that losing weight will help with that as well.”

Susan London/Frontline Medical News
Dr. C. Kent Osborne
In discussions among the investigators about implementing the study’s findings via weight loss counseling and intervention, reimbursement was identified as an ongoing concern, Dr. Chlebowski noted. “Certainly, oncologists do not get any money for encouraging this or taking any steps to implement this. So that’s another battle that needs to be conducted.”

Additional results from the study showed that women who experienced a weight gain of at least 5% did not have a significantly elevated risk of breast cancer overall.

“Do you think that the women who gained a little bit of weight didn’t have an increase in incidence because they were already overweight?” Dr. Osborne asked.

“When we go over all these very complex mechanisms and the different drivers, there’s probably a threshold. So obesity’s association with inflammatory factors, I think that’s a driver to a certain degree. But then something else takes over, or maybe the main driver takes over,” Dr. Chlebowski replied. “We don’t have enough data to decide exactly what that threshold is, but that’s the ongoing hypothesis.”

In the session, attendee Daniel McGrail, PhD, of the MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, asked, “Since this [risk reduction with weight loss] occurred regardless of initial [body mass index], and you have all these covariates accounted for, does that imply that actually caloric deficits or decreasing caloric intake could be preventing breast cancer risk regardless of initial weight or any other parameters?”

“In all these western diseases, what we take for normal is probably less normal than it might have been 250 years ago or thousands of years ago when we were eating berries and being chased by animals,” Dr. Chlebowski replied. “So this raises a question as to whether the normal weight cutoff should be an ideal weight for western cancer prevention.”

Study details

The Women’s Health Initiative Observational Study recruited 93,676 postmenopausal women aged 50-79 years from 40 U.S. clinical centers during 1993-1998. The women had measurements taken of height and weight at baseline and at year 3 for calculation of BMI, and were asked about intentionality of any weight loss during that period.

 

 

Analyses were based on 61,335 women who had normal or higher body weight and were cancer free at baseline, survived at least 3 years, and had adequate data.

Overall, about 13.3% of women lost at least 5% of their body weight between baseline and year 3; 7.9% did so intentionally, losing an average of 19.6 pounds, and 5.5% did so unintentionally, losing an average of 16.9 pounds.

“We used the 5% decrease because this level has been shown to change some biochemical markers potentially associated with cancer. And it has been shown in a different study population, a randomized trial, to reduce the frequency of diabetes,” Dr. Chlebowski noted.

“There was nothing that the study did to induce the weight loss. And based on a partial look at the data, it doesn’t look like many of the women went to some kind of program to lose weight. So it was probably self-directed weight loss,” he noted. “Interestingly, the body mass index of this group was 29.9, so they were on the verge of going into obesity. We wondered in retrospect whether that was a motivating factor for them.”

In multivariate analysis, relative to peers having a stable weight over time, the women losing at least 5% of their weight had a lower risk of breast cancer (hazard ratio, 0.88; 95% confidence interval, 0.78-0.98; P = .02).

Findings were unchanged after further adjustment for mammography frequency. In addition, risk reduction was statistically indistinguishable whether the weight loss was intentional or not (P = .2 for interaction), and whether women were normal weight, overweight, or obese at baseline (P = .4 for interaction).

The 19.6% of women who had a weight gain of at least 5% did not have a significantly elevated risk of breast cancer overall, but they did have a significantly elevated risk of triple-negative breast cancer (HR, 1.54; 95% CI, 1.16-2.05). “We really don’t have a good explanation for this,” Dr. Chlebowski said.

Tackling the global obesity epidemic by conventional means to reduce cancer risk is an uphill battle, he concluded. “We are going to be looking for possible mediating factors. If you can find the mediating factors, pharmacologic intervention would have a much greater chance of success.”

Dr. Chlebowski disclosed that he had no relevant conflicts of interest. Research was supported by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute; National Institutes of Health; Department of Health and Human Services; and American Institute for Cancer Research.

SOURCE: Chlebowski et al., SABCS 2017 Abstract GS5-07

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Key clinical point: Weight loss may be an effective prevention strategy for postmenopausal breast cancer.

Major finding: Compared with peers who had stable weight, women who lost at least 5% of their body weight had a lower risk of invasive breast cancer (hazard ratio, 0.88; P = .02).

Data source: A prospective cohort study of 93,676 postmenopausal women from the Women’s Health Initiative Observational Study.

Disclosures: Dr. Chlebowski disclosed that he had no relevant conflicts of interest. Research was supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institutes of Health; Department of Health and Human Services; and American Institute for Cancer Research.

Source: Chlebowski et al. SABCS 2017 Abstract GS5-07.

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