A Pooled Analysis of Bone Marrow Micrometastasis in Breast Cancer

Stephan Braun(Innsbruck Medical University), Florian D. Vogl(Krankenhaus Meran), Bjørn Naume(Norwegian Cancer Society), Wolfgang Janni(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Michael P. Osborne(New York Hospital Queens), R. Charles Coombes(Imperial College London), Günter Schlimok(University Hospital Augsburg), Ingo Diel(University Hospital Heidelberg), Bernd Gerber(University of Rostock), Gerhard Gebauer(Universitätsklinikum Erlangen), Jean‐Yves Pierga(Institut Curie), Christian Marth(Innsbruck Medical University), Daniel Oruzio(University Hospital Augsburg), Gro Wiedswang(Oslo University Hospital), Erich‐Franz Solomayer(University Hospital Heidelberg), Günther Kundt(University of Rostock), B. Strobl(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Tanja Fehm(Universitätsklinikum Erlangen), George Y. Wong(Cornell University), Judith M. Bliss(Institute of Cancer Research), Anne Vincent‐Salomon(Institut Curie), Klaus Pantel(Eppendorf (Germany))
New England Journal of Medicine
August 24, 2005
Cited by 1,382Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: We assessed the prognostic significance of the presence of micrometastasis in the bone marrow at the time of diagnosis of breast cancer by means of a pooled analysis. METHODS: We combined individual patient data from nine studies involving 4703 patients with stage I, II, or III breast cancer. We evaluated patient outcomes over a 10-year follow-up period (median, 5.2 years), using a multivariable piecewise Cox regression model. RESULTS: Micrometastasis was detected in 30.6 percent of the patients. As compared with women without bone marrow micrometastasis, patients with bone marrow micrometastasis had larger tumors and tumors with a higher histologic grade and more often had lymph-node metastases and hormone receptor-negative tumors (P<0.001 for all variables). The presence of micrometastasis was a significant prognostic factor with respect to poor overall survival and breast-cancer-specific survival (univariate mortality ratios, 2.15 and 2.44, respectively; P<0.001 for both outcomes) and poor disease-free survival and distant-disease-free survival during the 10-year observation period (incidence-rate ratios, 2.13 and 2.33, respectively; P<0.001 for both outcomes). In the multivariable analysis, micrometastasis was an independent predictor of a poor outcome. In the univariate subgroup analysis, breast-cancer-specific survival among patients with micrometastasis was significantly shortened (P<0.001 for all comparisons) among those receiving adjuvant endocrine treatment (mortality ratio, 3.22) or cytotoxic therapy (mortality ratio, 2.32) and among patients who had tumors no larger than 2 cm in diameter without lymph-node metastasis and who did not receive systemic adjuvant therapy (mortality ratio, 3.65). CONCLUSIONS: The presence of micrometastasis in the bone marrow at the time of diagnosis of breast cancer is associated with a poor prognosis.


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