Increased survival for patients with triple-negative breast cancer

Increased survival for patients with triple-negative breast cancer

9 Dec 2015

Patients with stage 2 or stage 3 triple-negative breast cancer who had a pathologic complete response after pre-surgery chemotherapy had increased event free and overall survival compared with those who had more than minimal residual invasive disease at surgery following pre-surgery chemotherapy, according to results from the randomized phase 2 CALGB/Alliance 40603 clinical trial.

Pathologic complete response: what does it mean?

Many patients with triple-negative breast cancer, especially those with breast tumors larger than 2 cm or evidence that the cancer has spread to lymph nodes in the axilla (underarm), receive chemotherapy before surgery, a treatment approach called neoadjuvant chemotherapy.

Previously published results from the CALGB/Alliance 40603 clinical trial showed that adding carboplatin or bevacizumab to standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy increased the number of patients with stage 2 or stage 3 triple-negative breast cancer who had a pathologic complete response, meaning that they had no residual invasive cancer detectable in breast tissue and lymph nodes removed during surgery, explained William Sikov, MD, associate director of clinical research in the Program in Women’s Oncology at Women and Infants Hospital of Rhode Island, and associate professor of medicine and obstetrics and gynecology at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island.

Clinical design and results of the phase 2 study

The CALGB/Alliance 40603 clinical trial enrolled 443 patients with operable stage 2 or 3 triple-negative breast cancer. In particular:

  • Patients were randomly assigned to standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy, standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy plus carboplatin, standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy plus bevacizumab, or standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy plus carboplatin and bevacizumab.
  • Surgery was performed from four to eight weeks after the completion of neoadjuvant treatment.

CareAcross-girl-at-sea

Sikov and colleagues found that, at three years after starting the study treatment:

  • Patients who had no residual invasive cancer detected in either breast tissue or lymph nodes had a 70% reduced risk of disease recurrence and an 80% reduced risk of death compared with those who did not have a pathologic complete response in both the breast and lymph nodes.
  • Including in the analysis both patients with minimal residual invasive disease in either the breast or lymph nodes, as defined by the Residual Cancer Burden method, and those who achieved a pathologic complete response in both the breast and lymph nodes, did not significantly alter outcomes: Risk of disease recurrence was reduced by 71% and risk of death was reduced by 79%.
  • No significant differences in event-free and overall survival were observed when the researchers evaluated whether adding carboplatin or bevacizumab to standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy affected these outcomes.

“Our study was not sufficiently large to determine the benefit”

“Our new data show that patients on any arm of this study who had a pathologic complete response had far superior outcomes compared with those who did not have a pathologic complete response,” said Sikov. However, he added that “while this is important, our study was not sufficiently large to have the statistical power to determine whether adding carboplatin or bevacizumab to standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy improved event-free and overall survival. Our results need to be considered alongside data from prior and ongoing studies with these agents in triple-negative breast cancer”

“On the basis of these results, at the present time, neither carboplatin nor bevacizumab should be considered part of the standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy regimen for stage 2 or 3 triple-negative breast cancer.”

“In regards to the question as to whether there is a benefit to adding either carboplatin or bevacizumab to standard chemotherapy for stage 2 or 3 TNBC, it is important to highlight that this is not a negative study,” said Sikov.

 

 

Source: eCancer News

Login to your account

Did you forget your password?