International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jan 2023)

Discrimination between Complete versus Non-Complete Pathologic Response to Neoadjuvant Therapy Using Ultrasensitive Mutation Analysis: A Proof-of-Concept Study in <i>BRCA1</i>-Driven Breast Cancer Patients

  • Anna P. Sokolenko,
  • Fedor V. Moiseyenko,
  • Aglaya G. Iyevleva,
  • Alexandr O. Ivantsov,
  • Georgiy D. Dolmatov,
  • Ksenia V. Shelekhova,
  • Elizaveta V. Gulo,
  • Anastasya X. Topal,
  • Elizaveta V. Artemieva,
  • Nuriniso H. Abduloeva,
  • Nikita A. Rysev,
  • Daria A. Barsova,
  • Natalia V. Levchenko,
  • Nikita M. Volkov,
  • Vitaliy V. Egorenkov,
  • Vladimir M. Moiseyenko,
  • Evgeny N. Imyanitov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24031870
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 3
p. 1870

Abstract

Read online

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) for breast cancer (BC) often results in pathologic complete response (pCR), i.e., the complete elimination of visible cancer cells. It is unclear whether the use of ultrasensitive genetic methods may still detect residual BC cells in complete responders. Breast carcinomas arising in BRCA1 mutation carriers almost always carry alterations of the TP53 gene thus providing an opportunity to address this question. The analysis of consecutive BC patients treated by NACT revealed a higher pCR rate in BRCA1-driven vs. BRCA1-wildtype BCs (13/24 (54%) vs. 29/192 (15%), p BRCA1 mutation carriers were available for the study. While TP53 mutation was identified in all chemonaive tumors, droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) analysis of the post-NACT tumor bed revealed the persistence of this alteration in all seven pCR-non-responders but in none of five pCR responders. Eleven patients provided to the study post-NACT tissue samples only; next-generation sequencing (NGS) analysis revealed mutated TP53 copies in all six cases without pCR but in none of five instances of pCR. In total, TP53 mutation was present in post-NACT tissues in all 13 cases without pCR, but in none of 10 patients with pCR (p < 0.000001). Therefore, the lack of visible tumor cells in the post-NACT tumor bed is indeed a reliable indicator of the complete elimination of transformed clones. Failure of ultrasensitive methods to identify patients with minimal residual disease among pCR responders suggests that the result of NACT is a categorical rather than continuous variable, where some patients are destined to be cured while others ultimately fail to experience tumor eradication.

Keywords