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Title: The 76-gene signature defines high-risk patients that benefit from adjuvant tamoxifen therapy.
Author(s): Zhang, Y.
Sieuwerts, A.M.
McGreevy, M.
Casey, G.
Cufer, T.
Paradiso, A.
Harbeck, N.
Span, P.N. (14500435X)
Hicks, D.G.
Crowe, J.
Tubbs, R.R.
Budd, G.T.
Lyons, J.
Sweep, C.G.J. (074620967)
Schmitt, M.
Schittulli, F.
Golouh, R.
Talantov, D.
Wang, Y.
Foekens, J.A.
Publication year: 2009
Document type: Article / Letter to editor
Journal: Breast Cancer Research and Treatment
ISSN: 0167-6806
Volume: vol. 116
Issue: iss. 2
Start page: p. 303
End page: p. 309
Abstract: PURPOSE: To assess the benefit from adjuvant systemic tamoxifen therapy in breast cancer risk groups identified by the previously established prognostic 76-gene signature. METHODS: In 300 lymph node-negative (LNN), estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer patients (136 treated with adjuvant tamoxifen, 164 having received no systemic adjuvant therapy), distant metastasis-free survival (DMFS) as a function of the 76-gene signature was determined in a multicenter fashion. RESULTS: In 136 tamoxifen-treated patients, the 76-gene signature identified a group of patients with a poor prognosis [hazard ratio (HR), 4.62; P = 0.0248]. These patients showed a 12.3% absolute benefit of tamoxifen in 10-year DMFS (HR, 0.52; P = 0.0318) compared with untreated high-risk patients. This represented a 71% increase in relative benefit compared with the 7.2% absolute benefit observed for all 300 patients without using the gene signature. In the low-risk group there was no significant 10-year DMFS benefit of tamoxifen. CONCLUSIONS: The 76-gene signature defines high-risk patients who benefit from adjuvant tamoxifen therapy. Although we did not study the value of chemotherapy in this study, low-risk patients identified by the 76-gene signature have a prognosis good enough that chemotherapy would be difficult to justify. The prognosis of these patients is sufficiently good, in fact, that a disease-free benefit for tamoxifen therapy is difficult to prove, though benefits in terms of loco-regional relapse and a reduction in risk for contralateral breast cancer might justify hormonal therapy in these patients.
Subject: ONCOL 3: Translational research
ONCOL 5: Aetiology, screening and detection
Organization: Radiation Oncology
UMCN Extern
Laboratory of Genetic, Endocrine and Metabolic Diseases
Chemical Endocrinology
Appears in Collections:Academic bibliography

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2066/81383

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