Impact of low versus negative estrogen/progesterone receptor status on clinico-pathologic characteristics and survival outcomes in HER2-negative breast cancer

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作者
Rachel Yoder
Bruce F. Kimler
Joshua M. Staley
Kelsey Schwensen
Yen Y. Wang
Karissa Finke
Anne O’Dea
Lauren Nye
Manana Elia
Gregory Crane
Richard McKittrick
Robert Pluenneke
Sheshadri Madhusudhana
Larry Beck
Anuj Shrestha
Larry Corum
Mark Marsico
Shane R. Stecklein
Andrew K. Godwin
Qamar J. Khan
Priyanka Sharma
机构
[1] University of Kansas Cancer Center,Department of Radiation Oncology
[2] University of Kansas Medical Center,Department of Internal Medicine
[3] University of Kansas Medical Center,Clinical Trials Shared Resource
[4] University of Kansas Medical Center,Department of Internal Medicine
[5] University of Kansas Medical Center,Department of Internal Medicine
[6] University of Kansas Medical Center,Department of Internal Medicine
[7] University of Kansas Medical Center,Department of Internal Medicine
[8] University of Missouri-Kansas City,Tammy Walker Cancer Center
[9] Salina Regional Health Center,Richard & Annette Bloch Cancer Center
[10] Truman Medical Center,Olathe Cancer Care
[11] Olathe Medical Center,Department of Pharmacoepidemiology/Oncology
[12] Merck & Co.,Department of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine
[13] Inc,undefined
[14] University of Kansas Medical Center,undefined
来源
npj Breast Cancer | / 8卷
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摘要
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is classically defined by estrogen receptor (ER) and progesterone receptor (PR) immunohistochemistry expression <1% and absence of HER2 amplification/overexpression. HER2-negative breast cancer with low ER/PR expression (1–10%) has a gene expression profile similar to TNBC; however, real-world treatment patterns, chemotherapy response, endocrine therapy benefit, and survival outcomes for the Low-ER group are not well known. 516 patients with stage I-III HER2-negative breast cancer and ER/PR expression ≤10% who were enrolled in a multisite prospective registry between 2011 and 2019 were categorized on the basis of ER/PR expression. TNBC (ER and PR < 1%) and Low-ER (ER and/or PR 1–10%) groups comprised 87.4% (n = 451) and 12.6% (n = 65) of patients, respectively. Demographic, clinical, and treatment characteristics, including prevalence of germline BRCA1/2 mutation, racial and ethnic distribution, and chemotherapy use were not different between TNBC and Low-ER groups. No difference was observed in recurrence-free survival (RFS) and overall survival (OS) between TNBC and Low-ER groups (3-year RFS 82.5% versus 82.4%, respectively, p = 0.728; 3-year OS 88.0% versus 83.4%, respectively, p = 0.632). Among 358 patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy, rates of pathologic complete response were similar for TNBC and Low-ER groups (49.2% vs 51.3%, respectively, p = 0.808). The HER2-negative Low-ER group is often excluded from TNBC clinical trials assessing novel treatments (immunotherapy and antibody-drug conjugates), thus limiting efficacy data for newer effective therapies in this group. Given that HER2-negative Low-ER disease displays clinical characteristics and outcomes similar to TNBC, inclusion of this group in TNBC clinical trials is encouraged.
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