scholarly journals 1577 Using CTS5 Calculator to Predict The 5-10-Year Risk of Late Distant Recurrence for Women With ER-Positive Breast Cancer Who Are Recurrence-Free 5 Years After Endocrine Therapy and To Reduce the Number of Patients Needing Discussion for The Extended Endocrine Therapy in The Breast MDTs: A Quality Improvement Project

2021 ◽  
Vol 108 (Supplement_6) ◽  
Author(s):  
S Ahmed ◽  
P Kiruparan ◽  
D Debnath

Abstract Introduction The increasing number of patients has created a pressure on the services provided that aim to ensure the maximum level of care, particularly MDT meetings. Using the CTS5 calculator can readily reduce the number of patients needing discussion for EET. This is will prevent delays in decisions made for patients and more importantly, an evidence-based tool will be used for more accurate results. Method A retrospective data collection was undertaken from the Breast MDT records, initially dating from January to December 2018. Then when the optional use of CTS5 was established, data were retrieved from August to October 2019. As per guidance for the use of the CTS5 calculator; Women were deemed low risk if their 5–10-year risk is less than 5%, intermediate if between 5–10%, and high risk if their 5–10-year risk is more than 10%. Finally, a prospective data collected from January to March 2020 where an agreement was made for all involved Surgeons to use the CTS5 calculator. Results Before Introducing the CTS5 Calculator, in 2018, the number of patients was 1523 from which 66 were for EET 4.3%. When CTS5 Calculator was first introduced, 1st of August - 31st October 2019, the percentage reduced to 4.1% and from January to March 2020, a further reduction 3.9% was noticed. Conclusions The CTS5 calculator is an effective evidence-based tool used to predict the risk of 5-10 years recurrence in breast cancer patients. Implementing it will reduce the number of patients needing discussion in Breast MDTs, sparing meetings’ and patients’ time.

2019 ◽  
Vol 39 (23) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuichi Mitobe ◽  
Kazuhiro Ikeda ◽  
Takashi Suzuki ◽  
Kiyoshi Takagi ◽  
Hidetaka Kawabata ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Acquired endocrine therapy resistance is a significant clinical problem for breast cancer patients. In recent years, increasing attention has been paid to long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) as a critical modulator for cancer progression. Based on RNA-sequencing data of breast invasive carcinomas in The Cancer Genome Atlas database, we identified thymopoietin antisense transcript 1 (TMPO-AS1) as a functional lncRNA that significantly correlates with proliferative biomarkers. TMPO-AS1 positivity analyzed by in situ hybridization significantly correlates with poor prognosis of breast cancer patients. TMPO-AS1 expression was upregulated in endocrine therapy-resistant MCF-7 cells compared with levels in parental cells and was estrogen inducible. Gain and loss of TMPO-AS1 experiments showed that TMPO-AS1 promotes the proliferation and viability of estrogen receptor (ER)-positive breast cancer cells in vitro and in vivo. Global expression analysis using a microarray demonstrated that TMPO-AS1 is closely associated with the estrogen signaling pathway. TMPO-AS1 could positively regulate estrogen receptor 1 (ESR1) mRNA expression by stabilizing ESR1 mRNA through interaction with ESR1 mRNA. Enhanced expression of ESR1 mRNA by TMPO-AS1 could play a critical role in the proliferation of ER-positive breast cancer. Our findings provide a new insight into the understanding of molecular mechanisms underlying hormone-dependent breast cancer progression and endocrine resistance.


2011 ◽  
Vol 93 (4) ◽  
pp. 286-289 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Osborn ◽  
M Jones ◽  
C Champ ◽  
K Gower-Thomas ◽  
E Vaughan-Williams

INTRODUCTION Elderly patients with oestrogen receptor (ER)-positive breast cancer wishing to avoid surgery or those who are considered unsuitable for a general anaesthetic may be treated with primary endocrine therapy. We have reviewed all patients with ER-positive breast cancer who were initially treated with primary hormone therapy (PHT) at a district general hospital in south Wales and investigated their outcome in order to evaluate the appropriateness of this method of managing breast cancer. MATERIALS AND METHODS All patients with breast cancer who were initially treated with PHT between January 2002 and December 2008 were identified from a single consultant's prospectively maintained database. For each patient the Charlson co-morbidity index was calculated to give an estimate of ten-year survival. Patients who had died during the study period were identified from hospital and cancer registries. RESULTS A total of 83 cancers in 82 patients with a median age of 81 years (range: 62–93 years) were included. All cancers were ER-positive. Six patients (7%) had a greater than 50% chance of surviving ten years, calculated using the Charlson index. The median follow-up period was 24 months (range: 6–72 months). Twelve patients (15%) had disease progression while taking PHT. Twenty-three patients (28%) have died (median time from diagnosis to death of 10.5 months, range: 1–77 months). Two patients (2%) experienced disease progression within six months of starting PHT and the number of patients whose cancer progressed increased with increasing length of follow up. Fourteen patients (17%) eventually underwent a wide local excision under local anaesthetic. CONCLUSIONS PHT can be considered an effective treatment in this elderly, unfit population with the aim of stopping disease progression so that these patients die with their breast cancer, not of it.


The Breast ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 662-668 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mathilde S. Larsen ◽  
Karsten Bjerre ◽  
Anne E. Lykkesfeldt ◽  
Anita Giobbie-Hurder ◽  
Anne-Vibeke Lænkholm ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 87-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandra E Ghayad ◽  
Julie A Vendrell ◽  
Ivan Bieche ◽  
Frédérique Spyratos ◽  
Charles Dumontet ◽  
...  

Cross-resistance to molecules used in endocrine therapy is among the main challenges in the treatment of estrogen receptor-α (ERα) positive breast cancer. In this study, we used two different cell models of resistance to anti-estrogens: MVLN/CL6.7 cells and VP229/VP267 cells selected after exposure to tamoxifen respectively in vitro and in vivo to characterize a phenotype rarely observed, i.e. acquisition of cross-resistance to the pure ER antagonist fulvestrant. As MVLN/CL6.7 cells and VP229/VP267 cell lines are original and valuable models of cross-resistance to tamoxifen and fulvestrant, we examined candidate genes using a RTQ-PCR strategy to identify new biomarkers of endocrine resistance. Out of the 26 candidate genes tested, 19 displayed deregulation of expression at the basal level in at least one of the two resistant cell lines. Eight genes (TACC1, NOV, PTTG1, MAD2L1, BAK1, TGFB2, BIRC5, and CCNE2) were significantly overexpressed in samples from ER-positive breast cancer patients who relapsed after tamoxifen treatment (n=24) compared with samples from patients who did not (n=24). Five genes (TACC1, NOV, PTTG1, BAK1, and TGFB2) were correlated with significantly shorter relapse-free survival (univariate analysis). Finally, we identified TACC1 and a three-gene expression signature (TACC1, NOV, and PTTG1) as independent prognostic markers (multivariate analysis). Aberrant mRNA and protein levels of TACC1, NOV, and PTTG1 were also observed under tamoxifen and/or fulvestrant exposure in resistant CL6.7 cells compared with their respective control MVLN cells. In conclusion, our data identify TACC1, NOV, and PTTG1 as promising new markers that could be used in the clinical management of ER-positive breast cancer patients.


2006 ◽  
Vol 24 (18_suppl) ◽  
pp. 20120-20120
Author(s):  
P. Urban ◽  
V. Vuaroqueaux ◽  
M. Labuhn ◽  
M. Delorenzi ◽  
P. Wirapati ◽  
...  

20120 Background: Molecular profiling recently defined biological characteristics of several long-recognized breast cancer subtypes including ER-positive (luminal subtype), ER-negative/ERBB2-positive (ERBB2 subtype) and ER-negative/ErBB2-negative (basal-like subtype). Each of these particular subtypes has different impact on patient outcome and should be therefore taken in consideration for individual scoring calculations. Methods: The quantitative RNA expression levels of 70 relevant genes were simultaneously determined in fresh frozen samples of 317 primary breast cancer (BC) patients comprehending ER-positive (70%), ER-negative/ERBB2-positive (15%) and ERBB2-negative/ER-negative (15%) and with known follow-up data. Five years distant recurrence scoring systems were calculated by means of Cox-hazard regression models. Results: Two main prognostic scoring systems were developed: one based on genes relative to proliferation representing tumor growth and its velocity, the other based on proteases. A low proliferation score identified 30% of patients at very good prognosis (probability of distant recurrence 12%, CI: 1.5–22%) all belonging to the ER-positive subcategory as compared to cases with higher proliferation (probability of distant recurrence 31%, 32–38%). The probability to develop distant recurrence within 5 years for 30% of ERBB2-positive patients was of only 12% (CI 0–25%) when accompanied by low levels of proteases as compared to the remaining ERBB2-positive patients with a probability of recurrence of 40% (CI 22–54%). Conclusions: ER, ERBB2 and the expression levels of the few identified genes involved in tumor proliferation and invasion can be easily and precisely detected by means of QRT-PCR. This robust method allows fine tuned prognosis and gives predictive information for the treatment of individual breast cancer. [Table: see text]


2012 ◽  
Vol 30 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 542-542
Author(s):  
Martin Filipits ◽  
Peter Christian Dubsky ◽  
Margaretha Rudas ◽  
Jan C. Brase ◽  
Ralf Kronenwett ◽  
...  

542 Background: Many ER-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer patients are treated by adjuvant chemotherapy according to current clinical guidelines. We retrospectively assessed whether the combined gene expression/ clinicopathological EndoPredict-clin (EPclin) score improved the accuracy of risk classification in addition to considering clinical guidelines. Methods: Three clinical breast cancer guidelines (National Comprehensive Cancer Center Network (NCCN), German S3 and St. Gallen 2011), and the EPclin score - assessed by quantitative RT-PCR in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue - were used to assign risk groups in 1,702 ER-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer patients from two randomized phase III trials (Austrian Breast and Colorectal Cancer Study Group 6 and 8) treated with endocrine therapy only. Results: Although all analyzed clinical guidelines identified a low-risk group with improved metastasis-free survival, the overwhelming majority of all patients (81-94%) were classified as intermediate / high risk. In contrast to that, the EPclin classified only 37% of all patients as high risk and that stratification resulted in the best separation between low and high risk groups (p < 0.001, HR = 5.11 (3.48-7.51). Consequently, the majority of all patients deemed intermediate / high risk by the clinical guidelines was re-classified as low risk by the EPclin score. Kaplan Meier analyses demonstrated that the re-classified subgroups (47 to 57% of all patients) had an excellent 10-year metastasis-free survival of 95% comparable to the clinical assigned low-risk groups although encompassing a higher proportion of the trial patients. Conclusions: The EPclin score predicted distant recurrence more accurately than all three clinical guidelines and is especially useful to reclassify patients considered as intermediate / high risk by the guidelines. The data suggests that the EPclin score provides clinically useful prognostic information beyond common clinical guidelines and can be used to accurately identify the clinically relevant group of patients who are adequately and sufficiently treated with adjuvant endocrine therapy alone.


2014 ◽  
Vol 99 (1) ◽  
pp. 2-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali İnal ◽  
Tulay Akman ◽  
Sebnem Yaman ◽  
Selcuk Cemil Ozturk ◽  
Caglayan Geredeli ◽  
...  

Abstract There is very little information about breast cancer characteristics, treatment choices, and survival among elderly patients. The purpose of this multicenter retrospective study was to examine the clinical, pathologic, and biologic characteristics of 620 breast cancer patients age 70 years or older. Between June 1991 and May 2012, 620 patients with breast cancer, recruited from 16 institutions, were enrolled in the retrospective study. Patients had smaller tumors at diagnosis; only 15% of patients had tumors larger than 5 cm. The number of patients who had no axillary lymph node involvement was 203 (32.7%). Ninety-three patients (15.0%) had metastatic disease at diagnosis. Patients were characterized by a higher fraction of pure lobular carcinomas (75.3%). The tumors of the elderly patients were also more frequently estrogen receptor (ER) positive (75.2%) and progesterone receptor (PR) positive (67.3%). The local and systemic therapies for breast cancer differed according to age. An association between age and overall survival has not been demonstrated in elderly patients with breast cancer. In conclusion, the biologic behavior of older patients with breast cancer differs from younger patients, and older patients receive different treatments.


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