Impact of neoadjuvant therapy on eligibility for and frequency of breast conservation in stage II–III HER2-positive breast cancer: Surgical results of CALGB 40601 (Alliance) Journal Article


Authors: Golshan, M.; Cirrincione, C. T.; Sikov, W. M.; Carey, L. A.; Berry, D. A.; Overmoyer, B.; Henry, N. L.; Somlo, G.; Port, E.; Burstein, H. J.; Hudis, C.; Winer, E.; Ollila, D. W.; for the Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology
Article Title: Impact of neoadjuvant therapy on eligibility for and frequency of breast conservation in stage II–III HER2-positive breast cancer: Surgical results of CALGB 40601 (Alliance)
Abstract: Objective: It had been previously shown that patients who receive neoadjuvant systemic therapy (NST) are more likely to undergo breast-conserving therapy (BCT) than those who have primary surgery. However, the frequency with which patients who are not BCT-eligible prior to NST convert to BCT-eligible with treatment is unknown. To document this conversion rate in a subset of patients expected to have a high clinical response rate to NST, we studied surgical assessment and management of patients enrolled on a randomized neoadjuvant trial for stage II–III HER2-positive breast cancer (HER2 + BC)(CALGB 40601). Methods: The treating surgeon assessed BCT candidacy based on clinico-radiographic criteria both before and after NST. Definitive breast surgical management was at surgeon and patient discretion. We sought to determine (1) the conversion rate from BCT-ineligible to BCT-eligible (2) the percentage of BCT-eligible patients who chose breast conservation, and (3) the rate of successful BCT. We also evaluated surgeon-determined factors for BCT-ineligibility and the correlation between BCT eligibility and pathologic complete response (pCR). Results: Of 292 patients with pre- and post-NST surgical assessments, 59 % were non-BCT candidates at baseline. Of the 43 % of these patients who converted with NST, 67 % opted for BCT, with an 80 % success rate. NST increased the BCT-eligible rate from 41 to 64 %. Common factors cited for BCT-ineligibility prior to NST including tumor size (56 %) and probable poor cosmetic outcome (26 %) were reduced by 67 and 75 %, respectively, with treatment, while multicentricity, the second most common factor (33 %), fell by only 16 %. Since 23 % of the BCT-eligible patients chose mastectomy, BCT was the final surgical procedure in just 40 % of the patients. Patients considered BCT-eligible both at baseline and after NST had a pCR rate of 55 %, while patients who were BCT-ineligible prior to NST had the same pCR rate (44 %) whether they converted to BCT-eligible or not. Conclusions: Many patients with HER2 + BC deemed ineligible for BCT at baseline can be converted to BCT-eligible with NST; excluding patients with multicentric disease substantially increases that percentage. In converted patients who opt for BCT, the success rate is similar to that of patients considered BCT-eligible at baseline. Whether a BCT-ineligible patient converts to BCT eligibility or not does not appear to affect the likelihood of achieving a pCR. Despite the efficacy of NST in this patient cohort, only 40 % of patients had successful BCT; further research into why BCT-eligible patients often opt for mastectomy is needed. © 2016, Springer Science+Business Media New York.
Keywords: neoadjuvant therapy; breast conserving therapy; her2-positive breast cancer
Journal Title: Breast Cancer Research and Treatment
Volume: 160
Issue: 2
ISSN: 0167-6806
Publisher: Springer  
Date Published: 2016-11-01
Start Page: 297
End Page: 304
Language: English
DOI: 10.1007/s10549-016-4006-6
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 27704226
PMCID: PMC5189982
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 6 December 2016 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Clifford Hudis
    905 Hudis