Abstract 254P
Background
A preoperative core-needle biopsy (CNB) guides decisions on neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT). Biomarkers (ER, PgR, HER2, Ki67 and NHG) assesed by conventional pathology and immuhistochemistry (IHC) inform tumor characterization. Gene expression (GEX) can be used to quantify biomarkers, complementing IHC. This exploratoy study aims to assess the impact of NACT on biomarker status in residual disease, and asses the effect on patient outcome.
Methods
Early breast cancer patients from Skåne and Halmstad (subset of SCAN-B cohort) planned for NACT (2010-2019) were included. Patients were treated per Swedish guidelines. Tumors were analyzed by whole-genome mRNA sequencing, and RNAseq classifiers developed by the SCAN-B group for predicting standard biomarkers were utilized.
Results
Of 443 patients, 23% achieved pCR (29% HR+/HER2+, 6% HR+/HER2-, 59% HR-/HER2+, 30% HR-/HER2-). In residual disease, ER, PgR, HER2, and Ki67 status by IHC between the preNACT biopsy and surgical resection were concordant in 96.3%, 83.7%, 89.9%, and 53.7% of cases, with kappa values of 0.913, 0.678, 0.668, and 0.174, respectively. Similar concordance rates were seen on GEX classifiers. Significant switches were observed from PgR and HER2 positive to negative (p < 0.001 and p=0.02) and from high to low Ki67 (p < 0.001) by IHC. Among HER2-amplified disease, 3+ score on IHC on a preNACT biopsy was associated with a higher pCR rate than 2+ score (48% vs 11%, p<0.001). In ER+ tumors with high Ki67 status as per GEX at baseline, switching to low Ki67 after NACT was prognostic of a superior invasive breast cancer free survival (HR=0.17 [0.06-0.52], p<0.001].
Conclusions
While ER is a stable biomarker, NACT affects PgR, HER2, and Ki67 expression. A reduction in tumor proliferation detected by GEX in luminal tumors is prognostic of a favorable outcome. Strong membrane staining for HER2 (3+ vs 2+) in HER2+ tumors is predictive of pCR. The biological significance of the PgR and HER2 switch should be further explored.
Clinical trial identification
NCT02306096.
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Fru Berta Kamprads stiftelse, Mats Paulssons Stiftelse, Swiss Cancer Center Biltema Foundation.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
1998P - Preliminary results from a phase I study of T3011, an oncolytic HSV expressing IL-12 and anti-PD-1 antibody, for BCG-failure non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC)
Presenter: Dingwei Ye
Session: Poster session 13
1999P - Expression heterogeneity of ADC-related targets between primary tumors and metastatic lymph nodes in advanced urothelial cancers
Presenter: Xingliang Tan
Session: Poster session 13
2001P - Epidemiology and treatment patterns of patients with locally advanced or metastatic urothelial cancer in France: A non-interventional database study
Presenter: Florence Joly Lobbedez
Session: Poster session 13
2002P - Efficacy and biomarker analysis of neoadjuvant disitamab vedotin combined immunotherapy in patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer: A multi-center real-world study
Presenter: Luzhe Yan
Session: Poster session 13
2003P - Clinical outcomes of patients with metastatic urothelial carcinoma (mUC) discontinuing enfortumab vedotin (EV) monotherapy (mono) without disease progression
Presenter: Michal Sternschuss
Session: Poster session 13
2004P - The combination of high levels of serum cytokeratin fragment 21-1 and VI-RADS≧4 has diagnostic and prognostic value in high-stage bladder cancer
Presenter: Shunsuke Ikuma
Session: Poster session 13
2005P - Prediction of response and identification of mechanisms of resistance to neoadjuvant chemotherapy according to molecular subtypes in muscle-invasive bladder carcinoma
Presenter: Alvaro Pinto Marin
Session: Poster session 13
2006P - Prognostic factors in metastatic urothelial cancer (mUC): Developing an accessible model for predicting patient survival
Presenter: Sevinc Balli
Session: Poster session 13
2007P - Similar genetic profile in early and late-stage urothelial tract cancer suggests that early genomic testing bears the potential of timely personalized treatment in clinical trials
Presenter: Dag Rune Stormoen
Session: Poster session 13