Asian Journal of Surgery (Oct 2019)

Survival outcome of adjuvant endocrine therapy alone for patients with lymph node-positive, hormone-responsive, HER2-negative breast cancer

  • Sung Ui Jung,
  • Guiyun Sohn,
  • Jisun Kim,
  • Il Yong Chung,
  • Jong Won Lee,
  • Hee Jeong Kim,
  • Beom Seok Ko,
  • Byung Ho Son,
  • Sei-Hyun Ahn,
  • Seung Wook Yang,
  • Sae Byul Lee

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 42, no. 10
pp. 914 – 921

Abstract

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Summary: Background/Objective: The prognosis of hormone receptor-positive and HER2-negative breast cancer is better than that of other subtypes. Current guidelines recommend chemotherapy for N1 breast cancer patients. However, this has the possibility to be over-treatment. Methods: This was a retrospective study of 18,549 patients who were surgically treated for invasive breast cancer, at a single center in South Korea, between January 1993 and December 2012. N1 stage breast cancer patients who were hormone receptor-positive and HER2-negative were enrolled, and propensity score matching was performed to compare patients treated with anti-hormonal therapy alone (N = 83) and those treated with chemotherapy followed by anti-hormonal therapy (N = 85). Results: In survival analysis, the survival parameters of the endocrine therapy-only group and the chemotherapy with endocrine therapy group were respectively 96.1% and 94.0% for 5-year recurrence free survival (RFS), 89.6% and 94.0% for 10-year RFS, 97.4% and 94.0% for 5-year distant metastasis-free survival (DMFS), 93.2% and 94.0% for 10-year DMFS, 98.7% and 98.8% for 10-year breast cancer-specific survival (BCSS), and 98.7% and 98.8% for 10-year overall survival (OS). There were no significant differences in RFS (p = 0.871), DMFS (p = 0.491), BCSS (p = 0.569) and OS (p = 0.731) between the two groups. Conclusion: Several patients with clinicopathologic features like hormone receptor positivity and HER2 negativity can avoid chemotherapy even with lymph node metastasis. Future studies with a long-term follow-up and a larger number of patients are required for validating our results. Keywords: Adjuvant endocrine therapy, Breast neoplasms, Luminal A breast cancer, Node-positive breast cancer, Prognosis