Chemotherapy response and recurrence-free survival in neoadjuvant breast cancer depends on biomarker profiles: results from the I-SPY 1 TRIAL (CALGB 150007/150012; ACRIN 6657)

The I-SPY 1 TRIAL Investigators(University of California, San Francisco), Laura J. Esserman(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Donald A. Berry(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Maggie C.U. Cheang(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Christina Yau(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Charles M. Perou(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Lisa A. Carey(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Angela DeMichele(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Joe W. Gray(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Kathleen Conway‐Dorsey(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Marc E. Lenburg(University of California, San Francisco), Meredith Buxton(University of California, San Francisco), Sarah Davis(University of California, San Francisco), Laura J. van’t Veer(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Clifford A. Hudis(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Koei Chin(University of California, San Francisco), Denise M. Wolf(University of Alabama), Helen Krontiras(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Leslie L. Montgomery(University of Southern California), Debu Tripathy(University of Southern California), Constance D. Lehman(Georgetown University), Minetta C. Liu(Georgetown University), Olufunmilayo I. Olopade(University of California, San Francisco), Hope S. Rugo(University of Alabama), John T. Carpenter(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Chad Livasy(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Lynn G. Dressler(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), David C. Chhieng(Yale University), Baljit Singh(New York University), Carolyn Mies(University of California, San Francisco), Joseph T. Rabban(University of California, San Francisco), Yunni-Yi Chen(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Dilip D. Giri(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Alfred Au(University of California, San Francisco), Nola M. Hylton(University of California, San Francisco)
Breast Cancer Research and Treatment
December 24, 2011
Cited by 376Open Access
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Abstract

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer allows individual tumor response to be assessed depending on molecular subtype, and to judge the impact of response to therapy on recurrence-free survival (RFS). The multicenter I-SPY 1 TRIAL evaluated patients with ≥ 3 cm tumors by using early imaging and molecular signatures, with outcomes of pathologic complete response (pCR) and RFS. The current analysis was performed using data from patients who had molecular profiles and did not receive trastuzumab. The various molecular classifiers tested were highly correlated. Categorization of breast cancer by molecular signatures enhanced the ability of pCR to predict improvement in RFS compared to the population as a whole. In multivariate analysis, the molecular signatures that added to the ability of HR and HER2 receptors, clinical stage, and pCR in predicting RFS included 70-gene signature, wound healing signature, p53 mutation signature, and PAM50 risk of recurrence. The low risk signatures were associated with significantly better prognosis, and also identified additional patients with a good prognosis within the no pCR group, primarily in the hormone receptor positive, HER-2 negative subgroup. The I-SPY 1 population is enriched for tumors with a poor prognosis but is still heterogeneous in terms of rates of pCR and RFS. The ability of pCR to predict RFS is better by subset than it is for the whole group. Molecular markers improve prediction of RFS by identifying additional patients with excellent prognosis within the no pCR group.


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