Heterogeneity of HER2 expression in circulating tumor cells of patients with breast cancer brain metastases and impact on brain disease control.

2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 2029-2029
Author(s):  
Douglas Guedes Castro ◽  
Antonio Cassio Assis Pellizzon ◽  
Alexcia Camila Braun ◽  
Michael Jenwei Chen ◽  
Maria Leticia Gobo Silva ◽  
...  

2029 Background: The HER2 expression switching in circulating tumor cells (CTC) of breast cancer is dynamic and may have prognostic and predictive clinical implications. This study aims to analyse the association between expression of HER2 in CTC of patients with breast cancer brain metastases (BCBM) and brain disease control. Methods: Exploratory analysis of a prospective assessment (NCT02941536) of CTC before (CTC1) and 4–5 weeks after (CTC2) stereotactic radiotherapy/radiosurgery (SRT). CTC were isolated and quantified by a method of isolation by size of tumors and analyzed by immunocytochemistry to evaluate the expression of HER2. Distant brain failure-free survival (DBFFS), the primary endpoint, and overall survival (OS) were estimated by Kaplan-Meier estimator. Log-rank tests were applied in order to compare the survival curves. For multivariate analysis of prognostic factors that affected DBFFS and OS, the Cox proportional model was adjusted. Results: The median age at SRT was 54 (34-70), the diagnosis-specific graded prognostic assessment (DS-GPA) was 1–2 in 17.5% and 2.5–4 in 82.5% and the primary immunophenotype (PIP) was HER2-enriched in 51%, luminal B (LB) in 31% and triple negative (TN) in 18% of the total of 39 patients. CTC were detected in all 39 patients before SRT and the median CTC1 was 2 CTC/mL. After SRT, CTC were detected in 34 of 35 patients (4 deaths between CTC1 and CTC2) and the median CTC2 was 2.33 CTC/mL. HER2 was expressed in CTC1 and/or CTC2 in 9 patients, of which only 2 patients had PIP HER2-enriched. After a median follow-up of 16.6 months, there were 15 patients with distant brain failure and 16 deaths. The median DBFFS and OS were 15.3 and 19.5 months, respectively. Median DBFFS was 7 months in patients with PIP TN and was not reached in PIP LB and HER2-enriched (p = 0.036); 14 months in patients with DS-GPA 1-2 and 7 months with DS-GPA 2.5-4 (p = 0.017); 10 months in patients without HER2 expressed in CTC and not reached in patients with HER2 expressed in CTC (p = 0.012). Median OS was 4.8 months in patients with PIP TN and was not reached in PIP LB and HER2-enriched (p = 0.0026); 19.54 months in patients with DS-GPA 1-2 and 7.6 months with DS-GPA 2.5-4 (p = 0.00088); 17 months in patients without HER2 expressed in CTC and not reached in patients with HER2 expressed in CTC (p = 0.104). On multivariate analysis, DBFFS was superior in patients with PIP HER2-enriched (HR 0.128, 95% CI 0.025–0.534; p = 0.013) and OS was superior in patients with PIP HER2-enriched (HR 0.073, 95% CI 0.018-0.288; p < 0.0001) and LB (HR 0.224, 95% CI 0.062–0.816; p = 0.023). The status of expression of HER2 in CTC was not included in Cox model for DBFFS due to lack of events in patients with HER2 expressed in CTC. Conclusions: The expression of HER2 in CTC was associated with a longer DBFFS and the switching of HER2 expression between PIP and CTC may have impact on prognosis and treatment selection of BCBM.

2015 ◽  
Vol 26 ◽  
pp. iii10
Author(s):  
H. Wikman ◽  
I. Hohensee ◽  
C. Riebensahm ◽  
I. Witzel ◽  
J. Matschke ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 100673
Author(s):  
Douglas Guedes de Castro ◽  
Alexcia Camila Braun ◽  
Vinicius Fernando Calsavara ◽  
Guilherme Rocha Melo Gondim ◽  
Maria Letícia Gobo Silva ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Afroditi Nanou ◽  
Leonie Laura Zeune ◽  
Francois-Clement Bidard ◽  
Jean-Yves Pierga ◽  
Leonardus Wendelinus Mathias Marie Terstappen

2013 ◽  
Vol 31 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 11043-11043 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julia Katharina Neugebauer ◽  
Brigitte Kathrin Rack ◽  
Bernadette Anna Sophia Jaeger ◽  
Ulrich Andergassen ◽  
Aurelia Pestka ◽  
...  

11043 Background: The discordance between HER2-expression on circulating tumor cells (CTC) in peripheral blood and the primary tumor has already been shown by our study group for early breast cancer patients with HER2-positive tumors. Here, we compare the results to CTC prevalence and HER2-status of CTC after adjuvant chemotherapy. Methods: The SUCCESS B trial compares FEC-Docetaxel vs. FEC-Docetaxel-Gemcitabine and HER2-targeted therapy as adjuvant treatment for patients with early, HER2-positive, node positive or high risk node negative primary breast cancer. We prospectively analyzed 23ml peripheral blood before and after chemotherapy. CTC and HER2-status were assessed with the CellSearchSystem (Veridex, USA). After immunomagnetic enrichment with an anti-Epcam-antibody, cells were labeled with anti-CK 8/18/19, anti-CD45 antibodies as well as a fluorescein conjugate antibody for HER2-phenotyping. Cutoff for CTC positivity was ≥ 1 CTC. HER-positivity of CTC was assigned if at least one CTC showed strong HER2 staining (3+). Results: CTCs and their HER2-status both before and after chemotherapy were available for 392 patients. In 179 (45.7%) patients no CTC were detected before and after chemotherapy. CTC status changed from positive before to negative after chemotherapy in 104 (26.5%) patients and from negative before to positive after chemotherapy in 69 (17.6%) patients, while 40 (10.2%) patients had a consistently positive CTC status. Patients were significantly more likely to change their CTC status from positive to negative than from negative to positive (p = 0.01). Of the 40 patients with CTC both before and after chemotherapy, 14 (35%) patients had HER2-positive CTC before and after therapy, and 9 (22%) patients had HER2-negative CTC at both time points. 7 (18%) patients had HER2-positive CTC before but not after chemotherapy, while 10 (25%) patients showed the reverse pattern (p = 0.63). Conclusions: Cytotoxic treatment does not seem to influence the HER2-status on CTC. Follow-up data within the Success B trial will analyze the relevance of the HER2-expression of CTC to predict the efficacy of targeted treatment.


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