npj Breast Cancer (Aug 2021)

Impact of estrogen receptor levels on outcome in non-metastatic triple negative breast cancer patients treated with neoadjuvant/adjuvant chemotherapy

  • Maria Vittoria Dieci,
  • Gaia Griguolo,
  • Michele Bottosso,
  • Vassilena Tsvetkova,
  • Carlo Alberto Giorgi,
  • Grazia Vernaci,
  • Silvia Michieletto,
  • Silvia Angelini,
  • Alberto Marchet,
  • Giulia Tasca,
  • Elisa Genovesi,
  • Enrico Cumerlato,
  • Marcello Lo Mele,
  • PierFranco Conte,
  • Valentina Guarneri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41523-021-00308-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Although 1% is the recommended cut-off to define estrogen receptor (ER) positivity, a 10% cut-off is often used in clinical practice for therapeutic purposes. We here evaluate clinical outcomes according to ER levels in a monoinstitutional cohort of non-metastatic triple-negative breast cancer (BC) patients undergoing (neo)adjuvant chemotherapy. Clinicopathological data of 406 patients with ER < 10% HER2-negative BC treated with (neo)adjuvant chemotherapy between 01/2000 and 04/2019 were collected. Patients were categorized in ER-negative (ER < 1%; N = 364) and ER-low positive (1–9%, N = 42). At a median follow-up of 54 months, 88 patients had relapsed and 64 died. No significant difference was observed in invasive relapse-free survival (iRFS) and overall survival (OS) according to ER expression levels, both at univariate and multivariate analysis (5-years iRFS 74.0% versus 73.1% for ER-negative and ER-low positive BC, respectively, p = 0.6; 5-years OS 82.3% versus 76.7% for ER-negative and ER-low positive BC, respectively, p = 0.8). Among the 165 patients that received neoadjuvant chemotherapy, pathological complete response rate was similar in the two cohorts (38% in ER-negative, 44% in ER-low positive, p = 0.498). In conclusion, primary BC with ER1–9% shows similar clinical behavior to ER 1% BC. Our results suggest the use of a 10% cut-off, rather than <1%, to define triple-negative BC.