Abstract 29P
Background
Early prediction of tumor response to therapy is essential for individualized treatment and sparing non-responders needless harm. A relationship has recently been found between pathologic response in breast cancer (BC) and a measure of cell loss based on serum levels of thymidine kinase 1 (sTK1), a macromolecule released when proliferating tumor cells are disrupted, and tumor volume. Objective: To establish whether the predictive power of this cell-loss metric can be further improved by baseline tumor characteristics.
Methods
Fifty-eight women with localized BC received neoadjuvant epirubicin/docetaxel in 6 cycles, supplemented with bevacizumab in cycle 3-6. The cell-loss metric, defined as the ratio between sTK1 (ng/ml) and tumor volume (cm3), was obtained prior to and 48h after cycle 2. The predictive value of this metric, and the improvement by adding routine baseline markers, was evaluated using pathologic response as endpoint (16 complete responses (pCR); 42 remaining tumors).
Results
Compared to baseline (median = 0.285 ng / ml), sTk1 increased 2-fold before cycle 2 and 3-fold 48h after cycle 2 while tumor volume (baseline 105 cm3) decreased by 70%. The cell loss method increased from 0.0032 units (IQR 0.0015-0.0099) to 0.0166 (0.0064-0.0423) and 0.0232 (0.0095-0.053), respectively, showing a strong association with pathological response (p = 0.002). Combination with histological markers, and especially the progesterone receptor, significantly improved the prediction of pCR, achieving positive and negative predictive values of 81% and 93%.
Conclusions
The usefulness of tumor markers in blood can be increased by combining them with other tumor properties. Thus, in neoadjuvant treatment of BC the cell-loss metric, which relates sTK1 to tumor volume, has been noticed as a predictor of pathologic response. Here we found that adding certain established tumor markers significantly improved the predictive power of the metric. Early prediction of tumor response makes the cell-loss metric potentially useful in personalized oncology and in the evaluation in new therapeutic modalities.
Clinical trial identification
PROMIX: NCT00957125.
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
Thomas Hatschek, MD, PhD, Karolinska University Hospital.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
B. Tribukait: Shareholder / Stockholder / Stock options, minor stock owner: AroCell Ab.
Resources from the same session
42P - Genome wide copy number analysis of circulating tumour cells in breast cancer liver metastasis
Presenter: Saber Imani
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
43P - A hotspot variants p.H1047R and p.H1047L in p110α/ΔNp63α complex affects structure, function and contributes to susceptibility metastatic breast cancer
Presenter: Zou Linglin
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
44P - Correlation of circulating tumour cells with PET-CT in metastatic breast cancer
Presenter: Venkata Pradeep Babu Koyyala
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
45P - The challenge of evaluating new targeted therapies: Opportunities in stratifying the therapeutic response per tumour location
Presenter: Hubert Beaumont
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
46P - Plasma soluble CD36 of breast cancer based on pathological and clinical characteristics
Presenter: Aditia Romadhoni
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
47P - Investigation of the use of a novel S-1 administration method for treating metastatic and recurrent breast cancer
Presenter: MAYUKO MIKI
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
48P - Development of MDA-MB-231-3D-Spheroid as a reliable model for studying Nav1.5 and nNav1.5-mediated breast cancer metastasis
Presenter: Ahmad Murtadha
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
49P - Biochemical study on modifying role of variants of leptin gene and its receptor on serum leptin levels in breast cancer
Presenter: Alshimaa Alhanafy
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
50P - Prognostic factors of recurrence or distant metastasis in elderly breast cancer patients
Presenter: Seungju Lee
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract
51P - Enhancing the anti-breast tumour activity of STING through a novel sting transcriptional regulator
Presenter: Hanchu Xiong
Session: Poster display session
Resources:
Abstract