Prognosis of breast cancer molecular subtypes in routine clinical care: A large prospective cohort study

André Hennigs(Heidelberg University), Fabian Riedel(Heidelberg University), Ádám Gondos(German Cancer Research Center), Hans‐Peter Sinn(Heidelberg University), Peter Schirmacher(Heidelberg University), Frederik Marmé(National Center for Tumor Diseases), Dirk Jäger(Heidelberg University), Hans‐Ulrich Kauczor(Heidelberg University), Anne Stieber(Heidelberg University), Katja Lindel(Heidelberg University), Jürgen Debus(Heidelberg University), Michael Golatta(Heidelberg University), Florian Schütz(Heidelberg University), Christof Sohn(Heidelberg University), Jörg Heil(Heidelberg University), Andreas Schneeweiß(Heidelberg University)
BMC Cancer
September 15, 2016
Cited by 199Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In Germany, most breast cancer patients are treated in specialized breast cancer units (BCU), which are certified, and routinely monitored. Herein, we evaluate up-to-date oncological outcome of breast cancer (BC) molecular subtypes in routine clinical care of a specialized BCU. METHODS: The study was a prospectively single-center cohort study of 4102 female cases with primary, unilateral, non-metastatic breast cancer treated between 01 January 2003 and 31 December 2012. The five routinely used molecular subtypes (Luminal A-like, Luminal B/HER2 negative-like, Luminal B/HER2 positive-like, HER2-type, Triple negative) were analyzed. The median follow-up time of the whole cohort was 55 months. We calculated estimates for local control rate (LCR), disease-free survival (DFS), distant disease-free survival (DDFS), overall survival (OS), and relative overall survival (ROS). RESULTS: Luminal A-like tumors were the most frequent (44.7 %) and showed the best outcome with LCR of 99.1 % (95 % CI 98.5; 99.7), OS of 95.1 % (95 % CI 93.7; 96.5), and ROS of 100.0 % (95 % CI 98.5; 101.5). Triple negative tumors (12.3 %) presented the poorest outcome with LCR of 89.6 % (95 % CI 85.8; 93.4), OS of 78.5 % (95 % CI 73.8; 83.3), and ROS of 80.1 % (95 % CI 73.8; 83.2). CONCLUSIONS: Patients with a favorable subtype can expect an OS above 95 % and an LCR of almost 100 % over 5 years. On the other hand the outcome of patients with HER2 and Triple negative subtypes remains poor, thus necessitating more intensified research and care.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis