Cancers (Jun 2024)

Breast Cancer Patient’s Outcomes after Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy and Surgery at 5 and 10 Years for Stage II–III Disease

  • Catalina Falo,
  • Juan Azcarate,
  • Sergi Fernandez-Gonzalez,
  • Xavier Perez,
  • Ana Petit,
  • Héctor Perez,
  • Andrea Vethencourt,
  • Silvia Vazquez,
  • Maria Laplana,
  • Miriam Ales,
  • Agostina Stradella,
  • Bartomeu Fullana,
  • Maria J. Pla,
  • Anna Gumà,
  • Raul Ortega,
  • Mar Varela,
  • Diana Pérez,
  • Jose Luis Ponton,
  • Sara Cobo,
  • Ana Benitez,
  • Miriam Campos,
  • Adela Fernández,
  • Rafael Villanueva,
  • Veronica Obadia,
  • Sabela Recalde,
  • Teresa Soler-Monsó,
  • Ana Lopez-Ojeda,
  • Evelyn Martinez,
  • Jordi Ponce,
  • Sonia Pernas,
  • Miguel Gil-Gil,
  • Amparo Garcia-Tejedor

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16132421
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 13
p. 2421

Abstract

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Introduction: Neoadjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer offers the possibility to facilitate breast and axillary surgery; it is a test of chemosensibility in vivo with significant prognostic value and may be used to tailor adjuvant treatment according to the response. Material and Methods: A retrospective single-institution cohort of 482 stage II and III breast cancer patients treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy based on anthracycline and taxans, plus antiHEr2 in Her2-positive cases, was studied. Survival was calculated at 5 and 10 years. Kaplan–Meier curves with a log-rank test were calculated for differences according to age, BRCA status, menopausal status, TNM, pathological and molecular surrogate subtype, 20% TIL cut-off, surgical procedure, response to chemotherapy and the presence of vascular invasion. Results: The pCR rate was 25.3% and was greater in HER2 (51.3%) and TNBC (31.7%) and in BRCA carriers (41.9%). The factors independently related to patient survival were pathology and molecular surrogate subtype, type of surgery, response to NACT and vascular invasion. BRCA status was a protective prognostic factor without reaching statistical significance, with an HR 0.5 (95%CI 0.1–1.4). Mastectomy presented a double risk of distant recurrence compared to breast-conservative surgery (BCS), supporting BCS as a safe option after NACT. After a mean follow-up of 126 (SD 43) months, luminal tumors presented a substantial difference in survival rates calculated at 5 or 10 years (81.2% compared to 74.7%), whereas that for TNBC was 75.3 and 73.5, respectively. The greatest difference was seen according to the response in patients with pCR, who exhibited a 10 years DDFS of 95.5% vs. 72.4% for those patients without pCR, p p p = 0.001, and patients with vascular invasion at the surgical specimen, with a 10 years DDFS of 59.2% vs. 83.6% for those patients without vascular invasion, p p = 0.054. Conclusions: Long-term outcomes after neoadjuvant chemotherapy can help patients and clinicians make well-informed decisions.

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