npj Breast Cancer (Jun 2021)

Composite risk and benefit from adjuvant dose-dense chemotherapy in hormone receptor-positive breast cancer

  • Fabio Puglisi,
  • Lorenzo Gerratana,
  • Matteo Lambertini,
  • Marcello Ceppi,
  • Luca Boni,
  • Filippo Montemurro,
  • Stefania Russo,
  • Claudia Bighin,
  • Michelino De Laurentiis,
  • Mario Giuliano,
  • Giancarlo Bisagni,
  • Antonio Durando,
  • Anna Turletti,
  • Ornella Garrone,
  • Andrea Ardizzoni,
  • Teresa Gamucci,
  • Giuseppe Colantuoni,
  • Adriano Gravina,
  • Sabino De Placido,
  • Francesco Cognetti,
  • Lucia Del Mastro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41523-021-00286-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract The GIM2 phase III trial demonstrated the benefit of dose-dense chemotherapy in node-positive early breast cancer (eBC). To better define the dose-dense effect in the hormone receptor-positive subgroup, we evaluated its benefit through a composite measure of recurrence risk. We conducted an ancillary analysis of the GIM2 trial evaluating the absolute treatment effect through a composite measure of recurrence risk (CPRS) in patients with hormone receptor-positive HER2-negative eBC. CPRS was estimated through Cox proportional hazards models applied to the different clinicopathological features. The treatment effect was compared to the values of CPRS by using the Sub-population Treatment Effect Pattern Plot (STEPP) process. The Disease-Free Survival (DFS)-oriented STEPP analysis showed distinct patterns of relative treatment effect with respect to CPRS. Overall, 5-year DFS differed across CPRS quartiles ranging from 95.2 to 66.4%. Each CPRS quartile was characterized by a different patients’ composition, especially for age, lymph node involvement, tumor size, estrogen and progesterone receptor expression, and Ki-67. A number needed to treat of 154 and 6 was associated with the lowest and the highest CPRS quartile, respectively. Dose-dense adjuvant chemotherapy showed a consistent benefit in node-positive eBC patients with hormone receptor-positive HER2-negative disease, but its effect varied according to CPRS.