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Abstract PS4-04: Molecular Subtyping by BluePrint Improves Prediction of Treatment Responses and Survival Outcomes in Patients with Discordant Clinical and Genomic Classification

Cancer research(2021)

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摘要
Abstract Background: The risk of distant recurrence gene signature, MammaPrint (MP), together with the molecular subtyping gene signature, BluePrint (BP), stratifies breast tumors into Luminal A, Luminal B, HER2, and Basal subtypes, independent of immunohistochemistry (IHC) or fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) expression. In the Neoadjuvant Breast Registry Symphony Trial (NBRST), MP and BP identified patients likely to respond to neoadjuvant treatment with higher accuracy compared to conventional methods. Here, we report 5-year follow up (FU) data in breast cancer (BC) patients from the NBRST registry with discordant clinical and genomic subtyping.Methods: This prospective study enrolled 1072 early-stage BC patients from 2009-2014 who received MP and BP testing. Patients received neoadjuvant therapy following standard of care and consented to 5 years post-surgery FU. IHC determined hormone receptor (HR) status, including ER and PR, and IHC and/or FISH determined HER2 status. Median FU for distant metastasis free survival (DMFS) and overall survival (OS) was 4.6 and 5 years, respectively. Differences in DMFS and OS was assessed by Kaplan Meier analysis and log-rank test.Results: Overall, BP reclassified 22% of tumors into different molecular subtypes compared to IHC/FISH (Table). BP reclassified 17% of ER+HER2- tumors as BP Basal, with higher pathological complete response (pCR) rates compared to ER+/BP Luminal tumors (36% vs. 4%). ER+/BP Basal patients had similar pCR rates as triple negative BC (TNBC)/BP Basal patients (36% vs. 37%) following neoadjuvant treatment, and pCR correlated with improved survival outcomes. The 5-year DMFS and OS probabilities were lower in ER+/BP Basal patients compared to TNBC/BP Basal patients and were substantially lower compared to ER+/BP Luminal patients (P < 0.001). There were 106 HR-HER2+ patients, of whom BP reclassified 23.6% to Basal and 2.8% as Luminal B; the remaining 73.6% were confirmed HER2 by BP. The 5-year DMFS and OS probabilities were worse in HER2+/BP Basal patients compared to HER2+/BP HER2 patients. Of 142 triple positive (TP, ER+PR+HER2+) patients, BP classified 55% as Luminal, 39% as HER2, and 6% as Basal, with higher pCR rates observed in BP Basal and BP HER2 tumors compared to BP Luminal. The 5-year DMFS and OS probabilities were substantially lower in TP/BP Basal patients compared to TP/BP HER2 and TP/BP Luminal patients (P < 0.05 and P < 0.04). Of clinical HER2+ patients (HR+ or HR-) that received pertuzumab, patients that reclassified as BP Basal had worse OS compared to BP HER2 patients (P < 0.04).Conclusion: ER+HER2- and HER2+ patients that reclassified as BP Basal are more likely to achieve pCR and have improved survival, demonstrating the clinical utility of BP in the neoadjuvant setting. These patients may benefit from optimized chemotherapy used for TNBC, including novel emerging treatments such as PD-1 and PARP1 inhibitors, in addition to HER2-targeted therapy. Furthermore, HER2+ tumors that were confirmed HER2 by BP may have high response rates to regimens containing TDM-1. Lastly, BP identified a subgroup of triple positive BC patients, who reclassified as BP Luminal, that may avoid overtreatment. Overall, molecular subtyping using MP and BP is more accurate in stratifying patients and predicting treatment responses and 5-year disease outcomes than conventional methods and thus, facilitates successful treatment decisions. Clinical subtypeFrequency of BP classificationBluePrint subtypepCR%5-yr DMFS (95% CI)5-yr OS (95% CI)TNBC (n=236)0.42% (1/236)Luminal A100% (1/1)N/AN/A2.54% (6/236)Luminal B16.67% (1/6)N/AN/A1.27% (3/236)HER233.33% (1/3)N/AN/A95.76% (226/236)Basal36.73% (83/226)100% (pCR)100% (pCR)60.5% (50.5-69.1)(non-PCR)64.3%(52.1-71.2) (non-PCR)ER+HER2- (n=520)28.84% (152/520)Luminal A1.97% (3/152)91.1% (84.0-95.2)94.6% (88.3-97.6)52.37% (276/520)Luminal B5.43% (15/276)75.2% (69.0-80.4)84.5% (79.0-88.7)1.33% (7/520)HER214.29% (1/7)N/AN/A17.46% (92/520)Basal35.9%(33/92)84.1% (67.8-92.5) (pCR)86.3% (70.1-94.1) (pCR)54.6% (42.0-65.5) (non-pCR)57% (43.7-68.2) (non-pCR)HR-HER2+ (n=106)2.83% (3/106)Luminal B66.67% (2/3)100%100%73.59% (78/106)HER269% (54/78)82.8% (69.9-90.5)88.6% (76.0-94.8)23.58% (25/106)Basal40% (10/25)79.0% (52.5-91.7)79.0% (52.5-91.7)Triple Positive (n=142)12.68% (18/142)Luminal A22.22% (4/18)88.8% (76.5-94.8)94.5% (83.8-98.2)42.25% (60/142)Luminal B11.67%(7/60)38.73% (55/142)HER244.44% (24/55)87.5% (72.0-94.7)97.9% (83.8-98.2)6.34% (9/142)Basal55.56%(5/9)62.5% (22.9-86.1)70.0% (22.5-91.8)HER2+ (HR+ or HR-)treated with pertuzumab (n=105)28.6%(30/105)Luminal37% (11/30)84.7% (63.8-94.1)92.2%(71.8-98.0)57%(60/105)HER282% (49/60)91.4% (78.3-96.8)92.9%(79.2-97.7)14%(15/105)Basal40% (6/15)66.0%(31.1-86.3)64.0% (29.1-85.1) Citation Format: Pat Whitworth, James Pellicane, Jr, Paul Baron, Peter Beitsch, Laura Lee, Michael Rotkis, Angela Mislowsky, Carrie Dul, Charles Nash, Bichlien Nguyen, Mary Murray, Paul Richards, Mark Gittleman, Stephanie Akbari, Shiyu Wang, Andrea Menicucci, Erin B Yoder, Lisa Blumencranz, William Audeh. Molecular subtyping by BluePrint improves prediction of treatment responses and survival outcomes in patients with discordant clinical and genomic classification [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 2020 San Antonio Breast Cancer Virtual Symposium; 2020 Dec 8-11; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2021;81(4 Suppl):Abstract nr PS4-04.
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