Cancers (Dec 2022)

Comparing Genetic Risk and Clinical Risk Classification in Luminal-like Breast Cancer Patients Using a 23-Gene Classifier

  • Chi-Cheng Huang,
  • Ting-Hao Chen,
  • Liang-Chih Liu,
  • Chiun-Sheng Huang,
  • Ji-An Liang,
  • Yu-Chen Hsu,
  • Chia-Ming Hsieh,
  • Sean-Lin Huang,
  • Kuan-Hui Shih,
  • Ling-Ming Tseng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14246263
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 24
p. 6263

Abstract

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Background: A 23-gene classifier has been developed based on gene expression profiles of Taiwanese luminal-like breast cancer. We aim to stratify risk of relapse and identify patients who may benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy based on genetic model among distinct clinical risk groups. Methods: There were 248 luminal (hormone receptor-positive and human epidermal growth factor receptor II-negative) breast cancer patients with 23-gene classifier results. Using the modified Adjuvant! Online definition, clinical high/low-risk groups were tabulated with the genetic model. The primary endpoint was a recurrence-free interval (RFI) at 5 years. Results: There was a significant difference between the high/low-risk groups defined by the 23-gene classifier for the 5-year prognosis of recurrence (16 recurrences in high-risk and 3 recurrences in low-risk; log-rank test: p p < 0.0001). Conclusion: This study showed that 23-gene classifier can be used to stratify clinically high-risk patients into distinct survival patterns based on genomic risks and displays the potentiality to guide adjuvant chemotherapy. The 23-gene classifier can provide a better estimation of breast cancer prognosis which can help physicians make a better treatment decision.

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