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Adjuvant chemotherapy of breast
cancer
Presenter: Dr. Gita Bhat
Moderator: Dr. Linu Jacob
• Why adjuvant CT? (Rationale)
• What is the evidence for the benefit of adjuvant CT?
• Do all patients require adjuvant CT?
• How to select adjuvant systemic treatment?
• What adjuvant CT?
• When to start adjuvant CT?
• How many cycles of adjuvant CT?
• Toxicity of adjuvant CT?
• Special clinical situations
Why adjuvant CT?
• Fisher hypothesis
• Gompertzian model
• William S. Halsted
• Halsted radical mastectomy
• Breast cancer arose in one location and spread
to nearby lymph nodes and then throughout
the body
• So, removal of breast, chest wall muscle, and
lymph nodes was the logical treatment.
• Bernard Fisher - alternative
hypothesis
• “Breast cancer is a systemic disease
in that, tumor cells were likely to
have been disseminated throughout
the body by the time of diagnosis
and that more expansive
locoregional therapy was unlikely to
improve survival”
• In 1967, chairman of NSABP –
multicentre RCT
Fisher hypothesis :
“Breast cancer is considered a systemic disease at
time of diagnosis, a condition requiring treatment of
the entire patient rather than just the source organ”
Gompertzian model
• Benjamin Gompertz
• 18th century mathematician
“Law of mortality”
• Growth rate of populations are exponential at
early stages of development and slower at
later stages
150 years later….
Dr. Larry Norton
Norton and Simon hypothesis
• Tumors follow Gompertzian growth functions
• Smaller tumors grow faster than larger ones
• Rate of cell-killing by many drugs is proportional
to tumor growth rates
• Tumors given less time to regrow between
treatments are more likely to be destroyed
• Shorten the interval between chemotherapy
treatments from 3 weeks to 2
• High-density dosing – Improved survival
Dose dense chemotherapy
What is the evidence for benefit
of adjuvant CT?
EBCTCG meta-analysis
EBCTCG Meta-analysis
EBCTCG 2011
• Is there a benefit to adjuvant chemotherapy compared with
no treatment?
• Is there a benefit to anthracycline-based regimens compared
with CMF?
EBCTCG 2012
• Role of taxanes in adjuvant chemotherapy of early breast cancer
EBCTCG 2011
Compared with no treatment, the use of anthracycline-containing regimen
was associated with the following outcomes at 10 years:
Risk of recurrence Significant
improvement
RR 0.73 Absolute gain of 8%
Breast cancer
mortality
Significant reduction RR 0.79 Absolute gain of 6.5%
Overall mortality Significant reduction RR 0.84 Absolute gain of 5%
Compared with no treatment, the use of CMF was associated with these outcomes
at 10 years:
Risk of recurrence Significant
improvement
RR 0.7 Absolute gain of
10.2%
Breast cancer
mortality
Significant reduction RR 0.76 Absolute gain of 6.2%
Overall mortality Significant reduction RR 0.84 Absolute gain of 4.7%
Anthracycline-based therapy vs. CMF
The use of “standard” doses of anthracyclines was associated with the
following outcomes at 10 years compared with CMF (n=5122 women)
The use of higher cumulative doses of anthracyclines (> 4 cycles, to
cumulative dose of >240 mg/m2) compared with CMF was associated with
the following outcomes at 10 years (n=9572)
No improvement in the risk of recurrence (RR 0.99)
No improvement in breast cancer mortality (RR 0.98)
No improvement in overall mortality (RR 0.97)
Reduction in risk of
recurrence
RR 0.89 Absolute gain of 2.6%
Reduction in breast cancer
mortality
RR 0.80 Absolute gain of 4.1%
Reduction of overall
mortality
RR 0.84 Absolute gain of 3.9%
• Preference of anthracycline-containing
regimen as adjuvant chemotherapy
• Standard dosing of anthracycline-based
therapy is equivalent to CMF, though less
effective than more anthracycline-intensive
regimens
• However, the data did not take into account
the use of taxanes.
EBCTCG 2012 meta-analysis
Trials where the same control regimen was used in both arms (n=11,167
women) (8 year outcome):
Trials where the number of cycles in the control anthracycline regimen was
doubled to mirror the addition of cycles of taxanes to anthracyclines
(n=33,084) (5 year outcome):
Reduction in risk of
recurrence
RR 0.84 Absolute gain of 4.6% in RFS
Reduction in breast cancer
mortality
RR 0.86 2.8% improvement in breast
cancer-specific OS
Reduction in overall mortality RR 0.86 3.2% improvement in OS
Reduction in risk of
recurrence
RR 0.86 Absolute gain of 2.9%
Reduction in breast cancer
mortality
RR 0.88 Absolute improvement of
1.4%
Reduction in overall
mortality
RR 0.9 Absolute improvement of
1.2%
• Affirms the benefit of taxanes when
incorporated into the adjuvant setting for
women with newly-diagnosed breast cancer
• The benefits were seen independent of age,
nodal status, tumor size, tumor grade and ER
status
How to select adjuvant systemic treatment?
Do all patients require adjuvant CT?
St. Gallen Consensus
Conference 2013
National Comprehensive
Cancer Network 2013
HER2 positive tumors Adjuvant chemotherapy (no
specific size threshold) and
trastuzumab
Adjuvant chemotherapy and
trastuzumab for tumors >0.5 cm
and/or node-positive
HER2 negative tumors ER negative:
Adjuvant chemotherapy (no
specific size threshold)
ER negative:
Adjuvant chemotherapy for tumors
≥ 1.0 cm and/or node positive
Consider for tumors 0.5 to 1.0 cm if
adverse prognostic factors are
present (lymphovascular invasion,
high-grade features)
HER2 negative tumors ER positive:
Adjuvant chemotherapy if 4 or ore
lymph nodes are positive
Consider if tumor >2 cm, or grade
2-3, or age <35, or lymphovascular
invasion is present.
Risk stratify by
ER/PR/Ki67/Oncotype Dx/ Intrinsic
subtype
ER positive:
Adjuvant chemotherapy if node-
positive
Risk stratify by Oncotype Dx if node
negative (and in select patients
with 1-3 involved ipsilateral axillary
LN – NCCN 2015)
Consider if tumor >1 cm, or if
tumor 0.6 to 1.0 cm and
lymphovascular invasion or grade
2-3 features are present.
Systemic treatment for early breast
cancer subtypes
Subtype Recommended therapy
Luminal A-like ET alone in the majority of cases
Consider CT if
i) High tumor burden (four or more
positive lymph nodes, T3, or
higher)
ii) Grade III
Luminal B-like (HER 2-negative) ET+CT for the majority of the cases
Luminal B-like (HER2-positive) CT+ anti-HER2+ ET for all the patients
HER2-positive (non-luminal) CT+ anti-HER2
Triple-negative (ductal) CT
• * For special histological subtypes:
• St. Gallen 2013 recommendations
ET for endocrine responsive CT for endocrine non-responsive
Cribriform Apocrine
Tubular Medullary
Mucinous Adenoid cystic
Metaplastic
Do all patients require adjuvant chemotherapy?
• Previously: Based on T size and N status
• Now: Tumor biology (Prognosis and variable response to
chemotherapy)
• IBCSG and CALGB:
• Some HR+ breast cancers do not benefit from adjuvant
CT and are relatively chemo resistant. They have
excellent prognosis with endocrine treatment alone.
• * Post menopausal ER+, LN-
• Therefore, role of genomics to help us select patients for
CT
Tools to select patients
• Oncotype Dx
• Mammaprint
• Adjuvant! Online
• NPI
• Predict score
Oncotype Dx or RS assay for patients with ER+, LN- disease:
• 16 cancer and 5 reference genes from 3 studies:
Category RS 0-100
Low risk RS <18
Intermediate risk RS ≥18 to ≤31
High risk RS ≥ 31
• Clinical validation – B14 results
• Patients with tumors that have low RS derive minimal if any benefit from CT
• Patients with tumors that have high RS have a large absolute benefit from CT
NCI Cooperative Groups TAILORx
Node-Negative, ER-Positive Breast Cancer
Recurrence
Score <10
Hormone
Therapy
Registry
RS 11-25
Randomize
Hormone Rx
vs
Chemotherapy +
Hormone Rx
RS >25
Chemotherapy
+
Hormone Rx
21-Gene Recurrence
Score Assay
Register
Specimen
banking
Primary study group
• Primary study group: Those with RS between 11 and 25 will be
randomized to either hormonal therapy alone or hormonal therapy
+ chemotherapy.
• This corresponds approximately to a risk of recurrence at 10 years
of 10%-20%.
• Dealer’s choice–type design: Individual investigators can select the
type of hormonal therapy and chemotherapy from a list included in
the protocol.
• The groups do not correspond to the low-, intermediate and high-
risk cutoffs found on the Oncotype DX™ report.
• The cutoffs in the study were selected to correspond with specific
risk levels.
• It was felt that it was not ethical to deprive a women of
chemotherapy if she had a risk level above 20%.
RxPONDER
• Rx for Positive node, Endocrine Responsive
Breast Cancer trial
• Use of 21-gene RS in node positive population
Other molecular tools for deciding
chemotherapy in node negative patients:
• 70-gene signature (Mammaprint):
 It uses fresh tissue for microarray analysis
 US FDA approval in February 2007
 LN negative patients of all ages, ER negative or positive, with tumor size <5 cm
 MINDACT trial: phase III RCT
 Mammaprint vs. Adjuvant!Online
 Selecting patients who are LN negative or 1-3 LN+ for adjuvant chemotherapy in
breast cancer
• PAM50 intrinsic subtype classifier
• GGI- Gene Expression Grade Index ( 97-gene measure of histologic grade. High
GGI is associated with a lower relapse-free survival)
• NPI: Nottingham Prognostic Index
• Prognostic scoring system for EBC
• Divides patients into 6 prognostic groups
based on tumor size, grade and lymph node
status
• PREDICT: UK prognostic model that predicts
survival following surgery for invasive breast
cancer
• Adjuvant! Online: Web based tool to estimate
the net benefit of adjuvant treatment for an
individual patient
• Estimates prognosis based on tumor size,
number of involved LN, grading, ER status
• Source: SEER database
• Assessment of treatment effect is mainly
based on: EBCTCG overview meta-analysis
What adjuvant CT?
• EBCTCG meta-analysis: benefit of
polychemotherapy, anthracyclines and
taxanes
• Evolution through CMF, AC, FAC and FEC-D
• Concurrent anthracycline-taxane vs sequential
• Weekly vs 3 weekly taxane
• Role of dose dense CT
• Role of HDCT
History (NSABP trials)
• B-01 (1958-61)
– Thiotepa vs placebo. Short course perioperative. Advantage in premenopausal, >4
nodes positive
• B-05 (1972-75)
– L-PAM (L-phenylalanine mustard, Melphalan) for node-positive orally for 2 year. 8%
DFS and 5% OS advantage in < 50 years at 10 year follow up
• B-10 (1977-81)- immunotherapy
– Combination chemotherapy (L-PAM + 5FU) +/- C.parvum and hydrocortisone: no
adv
• B-11 (1981-84)
– {L-PAM + 5-FU} +/- Adriamycin for node-positive and ER-negative tumors
• B-13 (1981-88)
– chemotherapy (sequential MTX and 5-FU) for node-negative, ER-negative tumors
– Benefit at 8 yr in overall DFS (74% v 59%; P < .001) was seen
Adjuvant treatment and survival improvement
over the past 40 years
CMF
• Cyclophosphamide, methotrexate and 5-FU
• 1st regimen to show improved DFS and OS in adjuvant
treatment of breast cancer
• Well tolerated
ADR: Fatigue, nausea and diarrhea
• Use has diminished with data showing benefit of
anthracyclines
CMF PO (Classic CMF)
Cyclophosphamide 100mg/m2 po d1-d14
Methotrexate 40 mg/m2 iv d1 and d8
5-FU 600mg/m2 iv d1 and d8
CMF iv
C 600mg/m2 iv d1
M 40mg/m2 iv d1 and d8
F 600mg/m2 iv d1
Epirubicin---CMF
Epirubicin 100 mg/m2 iv q3w* 4 cycles
Followed by CMF* 4 cycles
N=2391, N+ and N-
RFS of ECMF 83% vs 77%
OS 88% vs 82%
AC
• NSABP-B-15 (1984-88)
• AC*4=CMF*6
• Findings from 2,194 patients indicate no significant difference in disease-free
survival (DFS, P = .5), distant disease-free survival (DDFS, P = .5) or survival (S, P =
.8) among the three groups
• AC seems preferable since: AC was completed on day 63 versus day 154 for
conventional CMF
• patients visited health professionals three times as often for conventional CMF as
for AC
• nausea-control medication was given for about 84 days to conventional CMF
patients versus for about 12 days to patients on AC.
FAC
SECSG Trial in Node-Positive Breast Cancer:
Median follow-up of 5 years (n = 528):
• No significant difference in overall survival rates (74% vs 68%, P = .415)
between CAF and CMF
• Major toxicities similar
SWOG BREAST INTERGROUP INT0102 TRIAL: CMF vs FAC, in node negative
EBC
• 10-year estimates indicated that CAF was not significantly better than CMF
for DFS (77% v 75%; HR 1.09; 95% CI, 0.94 to 1.27).
• CAF had slightly better OS than CMF (85% v 82%, HR 1.19 for CMF v CAF;
95% CI, 0.99 to 1.43)
• Toxicity was greater with CAF
Role of anthracyclines (contd…)
• EBCTCG 2011 meta-analysis
• What is the optimal dose?
• CALGB 9344: compared 60/75/90 mg/m2 of Adriamycin – no benefit of
dose escalation
• CALGB 8541: Evaluated 3 doses of anthracyclines – low (30mg/m2),
moderate (40 mg/m2) and high (60 mg/m2). Benefit with high dose in OS
and RFS in HER2 positive patients.
Epirubicin – What is the optimal dose?
• 1996: ICCG
• Showed that FEC 50 and CMF had similar efficacy in pre-
menopausal, node-positive patients
• 1998: Dose of Epirubicin (FASG)
• FEC-100 vs FEC-50 as adjuvant treatment for patients with
Node-positive breast cancer
• 5-yr RFS 65% vs 52% (Relative risk reduction 32% P= 0.007)
• 5-yr OS 76% vs 65% (Relative risk reduction 31% P=0.007)
• CHF/AML/ALL – (1.1%, 0.4%, 0) vs (0.4%, 0, 0.4%)
Role of taxanes
CALGB 9344
N >3,000 patients
A: 60=75=90 mg/m2
P 175 mg/m2
C:600 mg/m2
EBCTCG 2012
5-year DFS
65% vs 70%
P= 0.0023
5-year OS
77% vs 80%
P= 0.0064
PACS 01 trial: FEC-D
S
U
R
G
E
R
Y
R
6 * FEC100: Arm A
5-FU 500mg/m2 on day 1
Epirubicin 100mg/m2 on day 1
Cyclophosphamide 500mg/m2 on day 1
6 cycles (q3w)
FEC-D: Arm B
3 cycles of FEC 100 q21 days
followed by
3 cycles of Docetaxel 100 mg/m2 on day 1
Every 21 days
Stratified on:
Centre
Age: < or ≥ 50y
Nodes: 1-3; ≥4
Key outcomes of PACS-01
• FEC-D
• Superior DFS and OS irrespective of number of nodes or
hormonal status
• 18% reduction in risk of relapse
• 23% reduction in risk of death
• Significant DFS benefit with FEC-D in ≥ 50 years age group
(P= 0.001)
• Incidence of FN with FEC-D: 11.2% (vs 24.7% with TAC)
• Reduced risks of acute and delayed cardiac events because
of 50% less exposure to anthracyclines
• FEC-D is a reasonable alternative in patients ≥ 50 years of
age.
Role of Taxane-based combinations as adjuvant
chemotherapy of early breast cancer
Concurrent vs sequential
BCIRG 005
NSABP-B-30
BCIRG 005
• Phase III RCT
• TAC (6) vs. AC (4) ---T (4)
• EBC – HER2 normal and
axillary LN positive
BCIRG 005 study design
Major eligibility criteria:
•HER2 normal by central FISH
•Histologically proven node-positive
•Stage T1-3, N1, M0
•Age ≤ 70 years, KPS ≥ 80%
Primary EP: DFS
Secondary EP:
OS, safety
BCIRG 005
BCIRG 005
Non-hematological adverse events (Grade 3 or 4 with incidence >1%)
TAC
N= 1635
AC-T
N= 1634
% % P-value
Arthralgia 0.9 2.4 0.001
Sensory
neuropathy
0.3 1.5 0.0004
Fluid retention 1.3 2.8 0.011
HFS 0 1.8 <0.0001
Myalgia 0.9 4.9 <0.0001
Key findings of BCIRG 005
• For the primary endpoint, DFS, adjuvant TAC is equivalent
to AC-T in patients with HER2 normal, node positive breast
cancer
• Despite AC-T delivering higher dose intensity for each of
the three agents and requiring 8 cycles, AC-T was not more
effective than TAC
• Compared to AC-T, TAC is associated with:
 More febrile neutropenia and GCSF use.
 Less sensory neuropathy, nail change, myalgia and shorter
duration of therapy
NSABP-B-30
• 1999-2004
• Role of sequential vs concurrent taxanes
• 3 arms (AC*4—T*4) vs (AT*4) vs (TAC*4)
“Sequential better than concurrent and AT non-
inferior to TAC”
AC-T AT TAC
8 yr DFS 74% 68% 69%
8 yr OS 83% 79% 79%
BCIRG 001
• TAC vs FAC
• 1491 patients, Node+
• Median follow up: 124 months
• DFS: 62% (TAC) vs 55% (FAC) (P=0.0043)
• 10Y OS: 76% (TAC) vs 69% (FAC) (p=0.0002)
CALGB-9741 (contd..)
Key findings of CALGB 9741
• At 4 yr: 26% reduction in risk of recurrence
and 31% improvement in OS with dose-dense
administration.
• There was a significant improvement in DFS
for dose dense regimen 82 vs 75%
• OS also improved(92 vs 90)
• Dose density improved DFS and OS, no
difference was seen between sequential or
concurrent schedule
10-year follow up of Intense Dose-dense
chemotherapy vs. Conventional chemotherapy in
high-risk patients with ≥4 positive LNs (SABCS 2012)
• Rationale: There are no published reports of long-
term survival and toxicity data with dose-sense
regimens.
• Objective: Confirm the Norton Simon hypothesis
of dose density and evaluate the safety of
epoietin alfa as primary prophylaxis
• Study population: High-risk patients having
atleast 4 positive LN
• All patients in the dose-dense arm received G-CSF
R
A
N
D
O
M
I
Z
E
N=1284
Cyclophosphamide
2500 mg/m2
q2w*3
Paclitaxel 225
mg/m2
q2w*3
Epirubicin
150mg/m2
q2w*3
Paclitaxel 175 mg/m2
q3w*4
EC 90/600 mg/m2
q3w*4
+TAM
+TAM
Primary EP: RFS
Secondary EP:
OS, QOL, toxicity
G-CSF ± epoietin alfa
• Efficacy results:
• No therapy-related death or long-term toxicity was observed
with iddETC
• Transfusion results:
• Negative impacts of epoietin alfa on RFS and OS were not
observed
• ;
Outcome IDD-ETC EC→T HR (95% CI) P-value
10-yr RFS 56% 47% 0.74 (0.63-0.87) .00014
10-yr OS
4-9 positive LNs
10+ positive LNs
69%
74%
62%
59%
66%
48%
0.72 (0.60-0.87)
0.77 (0.59-1.01)
0.66 (0.51-0.86)
.0007
.06
.0016
Transfusion-related outcomes
IDD-ETC
(n=324)
IDD-ETC +
EPO
(n=319)
P-value
Median hemoglobin (g/dL) -- -- < .001 (favoring +EPO
arm)
Need for ≥1 transfusion 28% 13% < .0001
Patients with venous thrombotic
event
7% 13% .029
Node-negative breast cancer
• GEICAM 9805 (FAC vs. TAC)
significant toxicity
• GEICAM/2003-02 (FAC vs. FAC—wP)
GEICAM 9805 (FAC vs TAC)
• High-risk, node-negative breast cancer defined
according to St. Gallen criteria
•18-70 years
•Post primary surgery
for unilateral operable
breast cancer (T1-T3,
N0)
•≥1 of St. Gallen 1998
high risk criteria:
T size > 2cm
ER and PR negative
Tumor Grade II or III
Age <35 y
Randomized
TAC q3w*6 cycles
FAC q3w*6 cycles
Primary EP: DFS
Sec EP: OS
Results of GEICAM 9805
• At a median follow-up of 77 months:
• TAC group had 32% reduction in the risk of having an event
• Fewer local and distant relapses
• Estimated DFS at 5 years: 90.1% in TAC group vs. 85.3% in
FAC group
• 24% reduction in the risk of death among those who
received TAC
• Safety: Grade 3 or 4 ADR (TAC> FAC) – asthenia,
neutropenia and leucopenia
• All grades (TAC> FAC) – Peripheral motor neuropathy,
sensory neuropathy, one pain, pyrexia, skin changes,
peripheral edema, arthralgia, amenorrhea and myalgia
Key findings of GEICAM 9805
• In women with high risk, node negative breast
cancer:
• TAC significantly improved DFS (32% reduction in
risk of recurrence at 77 months)
• Benefit from TAC maybe due to hormonal effect
in pre-menopausal women (Chemotherapy
induced amenorrhea: TAC> FAC)
• Post menopausal women also derived benefit
from TAC
GEICAM/2003-02 study
• Node negative breast cancer with high risk of
recurrence as per St. Gallen criteria
• FAC (6) vs. FAC (4)---wP(8)
• Primary EP: DFS
• Secondary P: OS
GEICAM/2003-02 (contd…)
• Results:
• At a median follow-up of 63.3 months:
• 5Y-DFS: 93% in FAC-wP vs 90.3% in FAC
• FAC-wP reduces the risk of relapse by 26.7% compared with FAC (statistically sig.)
FAC-wP FAC
Grade 3-4 neutropenia 21.8% 25.4%
Febrile neutropenia 2.7% 3.6%
Fatigue 7.9% 3.4%
Sensory neuropathy 5.5% 0
Vomiting 4.3% 4.1%
Persistent amenorrhea 15.9% 10.6%
Higher incidence of thrombosis with FAC-wP (due to use of steroids)
AC vs AC--P
• CALGB 9344: 5y DFS 65% vs 70%
• OS: 77% vs 80%
• NSABP-B-28: 5y DFS:72% vs 76%
• OS: 85% vs 85%
Which regimen?
• As of today, there are no recommendations
for choosing the regimen based on
Histopathology or Intrinsic subtypes.
• Choice of chemotherapy is based on
comorbidities, side effects and patient
preference.
• Endocrine-responsive breast cancer
• HER2 positive breast cancer
• TNBC
* Adjuvant chemotherapy: Which patient? What regimen? (ASCO
2013 Educational book)
Endocrine-responsive breast cancer
• Luminal A: Node negative- no benefit from
adjuvant CT
• Node positive:
• ? Absolute benefit of CT
• Addition of CT to be discussed with the
patient
• Luminal B: High Ki67 index, aggressive, risk of relapse
• Hence, chemotherapy and endocrine therapy are
indicated
• Choice of CT is based on risk of relapse
Luminal B with additional risk
factors: pT>1 &/or pN>0
Luminal B without additional
high risk factors
Sequential anthracyclines-
Taxanes
Docetaxel/cyclophosphamide
Adriamycin/cyclophosphamide
CMF
Spares toxicity
Does not compromise efficacy
HER-2 positive breast cancer:
• Trastuzumab + Chemotherapy
• Major consideration: Whether or not to add
an anthracycline
• Observed increased sensitivity of HER2+
tumors to anthracyclines is due to TOP2A
amplification
BCIRG 006
• Phase III trial comparing AC → T with AC →
TH and with TCH in the adjuvant treatment of
HER2-amplified early breast cancer patients:
Third planned efficacy analysis
• (Slamon et al, SABCS 2009)
BCIRG 006 (contd..)
• Trastuzumab provides a similar and significant
advantage for both DFS and OS when used
with either ACTH or TCH.
• The acute and chronic toxicity profiles of TCH
are better than those of ACTH
• No statistically significant advantage of ACTH
over TCH
• CHF was 5* more in ACTH than in TCH
• Plan treatment based on risk of relapse:
HER2 positive EBC with high
risk features (pT >1 and/or
pN>0)
HER2 positive EBC with low
risk features
AC-TH TCH
TNBC
• TNBC with good prognosis:
• Adenoid cystic and medullary
N- N+
Avoid adjuvant
CT
Give adjuvant CT even
with good prognosis
subtype
• Other TNBC:
• Eg: Metaplastic
• Adjuvant CT: Sequential anthracyclines –
taxane regimen
• TNBC and BRCA-associated breast cancer:
• Use of platinum
When to start adjuvant CT?
• Preferably within 2 to 6 weeks
• Significant decrease in the efficacy of
chemotherapy is observed when administered
more than 12 weeks from surgery
How many cycles of adjuvant CT?
• 6-8 cycles
Early and late long-term effects of
adjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer
*Breast cancer - ASCO 2013 educational book
• Adjuvant CT can lead to early and late long-term
side effects for breast cancer survivors.
• Effects of CT can vary in severity, but can often
negatively affect the QOL and overall health
status.
• Screening for symptoms, use of supportive
medication, referral for specialty consultation as
needed
• Ongoing research: Evaluate the etiology of
toxicity as well as effective interventions
Ovarian failure: premature
menopause, infertility,
sexual dysfunction
Hot flashes
Atrophic vaginitis
Loss of pelvic muscle tone
Loss of libido
Pretherapy referral to a
fertility specialist
Assisted reproduction
(Ovarian stimulation with
AI in the setting of HR+
cancer)
Weight gain Reasons: changes in
activity level, menopausal
status, endocrine
manipulation, diet,
metabolism and mood
Nurses’ Health Study:
Weight gain may increase
the risk of recurrence
Diet
Exercise
Active lifestyle
Bone loss Premature menopause
Effect of AI
WHI study: increased risk
of fracture in post
menopausal breast cancer
survivors
Screen at risk individuals:
DEXA q1-2y
Timely initiation of
bisphosphonates
Adequate calcium and
Vitamin D
Weight bearing exercise
Neuropathy:
• Peripheral sensory and motor neuropathy –
affect QOL
• Microtubule inhibitors: Taxanes
• Rate and severity of taxane-related
neuropathy: agent selection, dose, schedule,
comorbidities
• Supportive management:
• Dose modification and treatment delay
• Glutathione, acetyl-l-carnitine, alpha-lipoic acid
• Gabapentin, venlafaxine
• CALGB 170601: Duloxetine for painful chemotherapy-induced
neuropathy
• Best management: Avoid toxicity by identification of individuals at
highest risk
 Higher P-APS scores with first dose of CT may correlate with
peripheral neuropathy
 Identification of SNPs associated with development of moderate to
severe peripheral neuropathy after paclitaxel exposure
• * Taxol package insert
• Severity is dose dependent
• Those with pre-existing neuropathy should be
carefully monitored
• In severe cases, all subsequent doses of
paclitaxel should be reduced by 20%
• Cardiac dysfunction:
• Left ventricular dysfunction (Anthracyclines and
trastuzumab > cyclophosphamide and taxanes)
• Prechemotherapy identification of individuals at
high risk of toxicity: Older age, pre-existing
hypertension, low baseline LVEF, elevated BMI
• Cardiac risk score (Age and LVEF) to predict the
risk of a cardiac event (NSABP-B-31)
• ECHO
• Anthracycline mediated cardiotoxicity:
• Late-onset (atleast I year after completion of
CT) > acute or sub-acute
• Permanent cardiomyocyte apoptosis and
necrosis
• Late onset: irreversible, related to cumulative
anthracycline dose, due to free radical
formation
• Rates of symptomatic or severe cardiac
dysfunction in the major trials of adjuvant
trastuzumab + anthracycline: maximum of 4.1%
• Trastuzumab without chemotherapy/ T without
anthracyclines: 0.6% to 1.87%
• Rates of asymptomatic drop in cardiac function
after anthracycline exposure: 17% to 19%
• Neurocognitive dysfunction:
• “Chemo brain”
• 75% of women: change in cognitive function 2y after
treatment (attention, memory and concentration)
• Multifactorial: exposure to CT, other modalities of
treatment, supportive care medications, menopausal
symptoms, anxiety, depression, fatigue, comorbidities
• Role of genetic polymorphisms: APOE and COMT
• ? Prophylactic or therapeutic modafinil, fluoxetine, CBT
• Secondary malignancy:
• Rare yet most feared complication – MDS or AML
• <1% ( reflect increased cumulative dose)
• Concurrent use of growth factors, RT
Alkylators Topoisomerase-II targeted
agents
Examples Cyclophosphamide Anthracyclines
Induction period 5-8 y after start of therapy 2-3 y
Preceded by MDS yes No
Type of translocation Unbalanced Balanced
Chromosomes involved Long arm del or monosomy
of chr 5 and 7
MLL, RARA, RUNX1 loci of
11q23, 17q21, 21q22
Special situations
• Very young patient (< 35 years)
• Older patients (≥ 65 years)
• Isolated local and regional recurrence
Very young patient (<35 years)
• Young age is an independent risk factor for poor
prognosis
• Aggressive disease: high incidence of
 Hormone insensitive
 Undifferentiated
 HER2+ tumors
• Combination chemotherapy with anthracyclines and
taxanes: Luminal B, HER2+, TNBC; even for N-
• Gonadal toxicity
• Early referral to reproductive specialist
Chemotherapy in older patients (≥ 65 years)
• Comprehensive geriatric assessment
• Balance against:
• Risk of toxicity
• Poor QOL
• Functional decline
• Combination CT preferred in
 Node+, HR- EBC
 HR+, Luminal B
 HR-, Node-
Polychemotherapy in older patient?
CALGB 49907
Age > 65y
60% ≥ 70
R
A
N
D
O
M
I
Z
E
Oral CMF * 6
AC * 4
Capecitabine (X)
* 6 cycles
Both arms were tolerated well but more toxicity in
AC/CMF
Median follow-up: 2-4 years
CMF/AC vs single agent Capecitabine: Better RFS (p=0.00009)
Difference particularly marked in ER negative
Polychemotherapy is relevant in the elderly population
RFS
CALOR: Adjuvant CT for ILRR (SABCS 2012)
• Rationale: isolated local or regional recurrence
(ILRR) of breast cancer has poor prognosis
• No randomized studies of adjuvant
chemotherapy for ILRR have been published in
the last 30 years
• Objective: Evaluate the effect of adjuvant
chemotherapy on patients with ILRR
• Sample size: Original 977
• Due to slow accrual, only 162 patients were
randomized
• Chemotherapy chosen by investigators
• At least 2 drugs, 3-6 months of therapy
R
A
N
D
O
M
I
Z
E
+Endocrine therapy
for HR-positive
disease
+ HER2-directed
therapy (optional)
+ RT (mandatory for
those with positive
margins)
Adjuvant
chemotherapy
No
chemotherapy
Eligibility criteria:
•First ILRR
•Complete gross excision
of recurrence
•No evidence of positive
SCLN
•No evidence of distant
metastasis
CALOR trial (contd..)
CALOR trial (contd..)
• Results:
Site of first failure (after ILRR)
Chemotherap
y*
(n=85)
No
chemotherapy*
(n=77)
Total failures 24 34
Local/regional 6 (25%) 9 (26%)
Distant
Soft tissue
Bone
Viscera
15 (63%)
0
8
7
22 (65%)
2
5
15
Contralateral breast 1 (4%) 1 (3%)
Secondary non-breast
malignancy
1 (4%) 0
Deaths without failure 1 (4%) 2 (6%)
CALOR trial (contd…)
• Efficacy results:
• Multivariate analysis showed treatment
(chemo/ no chemo) to have significant impact
on both DFS and OS
Survival Chemotherapy
No
chemotherapy HR (95% CI) P-value
5-yr DFS
ER-positive
ER-negative
69%
70%
67%
57%
69%
35%
0.59 (0.35-0.99)
0.94 (0.47-1.89)
0.32 (0.14-0.73)
.046
.87
.007
5-yr OS
ER-positive
ER-negative
88%
94%
79%
76%
80%
69%
0.41 (0.19-0.89)
0.40 (0.12-1.28)
0.43 (0.15-1.24)
.02
.12
.12
Considerations for the future
• These need further validation in large cohorts:
Disseminated tumor cells (DTC)
on BMA assessment
•Prognostic in EBC
•Marker of recurrence
Circulating tumor cells (CTC) Poor survival after NACT or
primary breast cancer surgery
cf-DNA (cell free-DNA)
Plasma miRNA
Markers of relapse in EBC
Debate about anthracyclines in HER2 +
Does HER2 over-expression confer a unique and/or inherent
sensitivity to anthracyclines?
• The Topoisomerase IIα Protein 1s a major target of the
anthracyclines
• Current data indicate that it is the TOP2A gene
amplification and not HER2 that is responsible for improved
anthracycline sensitivity
• TOP2A amplification occurs ONLY in 35% of the 25% of
breast cancer patients with HER2 amplification
“only 8% of breast cancer patients”
• Moreover, for HER2-positive breast cancers, trastuzumab
appears to replace the gained efficacy of anthracyclines in
the one third of patients with co-amplification of HER2 and
TOP2A
Predicting anthracycline benefit: TOP2A and CEP17
• Meta-analysis of adjuvant trials that compared
anthracycline-based regimen with CMF –
HER2 amplification and combined TOP2A
amplification or deletion may have some value
in the prediction of response to anthracycline-
based CT, findings do not support the use of
anthracyclines only in patients with HER2-
amplified or TOP2A aberrated tumors.
questions
• Concept of adjuvant CT in ca breast?
• Which subtype of pt as per ebctcg do not
require CT?
• Subgroup analysis of dose dense CT??
Thank you

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Adjuvant chemotherapy of breast cancer

  • 1. Adjuvant chemotherapy of breast cancer Presenter: Dr. Gita Bhat Moderator: Dr. Linu Jacob
  • 2. • Why adjuvant CT? (Rationale) • What is the evidence for the benefit of adjuvant CT? • Do all patients require adjuvant CT? • How to select adjuvant systemic treatment? • What adjuvant CT? • When to start adjuvant CT? • How many cycles of adjuvant CT? • Toxicity of adjuvant CT? • Special clinical situations
  • 3. Why adjuvant CT? • Fisher hypothesis • Gompertzian model
  • 4. • William S. Halsted • Halsted radical mastectomy • Breast cancer arose in one location and spread to nearby lymph nodes and then throughout the body • So, removal of breast, chest wall muscle, and lymph nodes was the logical treatment.
  • 5. • Bernard Fisher - alternative hypothesis • “Breast cancer is a systemic disease in that, tumor cells were likely to have been disseminated throughout the body by the time of diagnosis and that more expansive locoregional therapy was unlikely to improve survival” • In 1967, chairman of NSABP – multicentre RCT
  • 6. Fisher hypothesis : “Breast cancer is considered a systemic disease at time of diagnosis, a condition requiring treatment of the entire patient rather than just the source organ”
  • 7. Gompertzian model • Benjamin Gompertz • 18th century mathematician “Law of mortality” • Growth rate of populations are exponential at early stages of development and slower at later stages
  • 8. 150 years later…. Dr. Larry Norton
  • 9. Norton and Simon hypothesis • Tumors follow Gompertzian growth functions • Smaller tumors grow faster than larger ones • Rate of cell-killing by many drugs is proportional to tumor growth rates • Tumors given less time to regrow between treatments are more likely to be destroyed • Shorten the interval between chemotherapy treatments from 3 weeks to 2 • High-density dosing – Improved survival
  • 11. What is the evidence for benefit of adjuvant CT? EBCTCG meta-analysis
  • 12. EBCTCG Meta-analysis EBCTCG 2011 • Is there a benefit to adjuvant chemotherapy compared with no treatment? • Is there a benefit to anthracycline-based regimens compared with CMF? EBCTCG 2012 • Role of taxanes in adjuvant chemotherapy of early breast cancer
  • 13. EBCTCG 2011 Compared with no treatment, the use of anthracycline-containing regimen was associated with the following outcomes at 10 years: Risk of recurrence Significant improvement RR 0.73 Absolute gain of 8% Breast cancer mortality Significant reduction RR 0.79 Absolute gain of 6.5% Overall mortality Significant reduction RR 0.84 Absolute gain of 5% Compared with no treatment, the use of CMF was associated with these outcomes at 10 years: Risk of recurrence Significant improvement RR 0.7 Absolute gain of 10.2% Breast cancer mortality Significant reduction RR 0.76 Absolute gain of 6.2% Overall mortality Significant reduction RR 0.84 Absolute gain of 4.7%
  • 14. Anthracycline-based therapy vs. CMF The use of “standard” doses of anthracyclines was associated with the following outcomes at 10 years compared with CMF (n=5122 women) The use of higher cumulative doses of anthracyclines (> 4 cycles, to cumulative dose of >240 mg/m2) compared with CMF was associated with the following outcomes at 10 years (n=9572) No improvement in the risk of recurrence (RR 0.99) No improvement in breast cancer mortality (RR 0.98) No improvement in overall mortality (RR 0.97) Reduction in risk of recurrence RR 0.89 Absolute gain of 2.6% Reduction in breast cancer mortality RR 0.80 Absolute gain of 4.1% Reduction of overall mortality RR 0.84 Absolute gain of 3.9%
  • 15. • Preference of anthracycline-containing regimen as adjuvant chemotherapy • Standard dosing of anthracycline-based therapy is equivalent to CMF, though less effective than more anthracycline-intensive regimens • However, the data did not take into account the use of taxanes.
  • 16. EBCTCG 2012 meta-analysis Trials where the same control regimen was used in both arms (n=11,167 women) (8 year outcome): Trials where the number of cycles in the control anthracycline regimen was doubled to mirror the addition of cycles of taxanes to anthracyclines (n=33,084) (5 year outcome): Reduction in risk of recurrence RR 0.84 Absolute gain of 4.6% in RFS Reduction in breast cancer mortality RR 0.86 2.8% improvement in breast cancer-specific OS Reduction in overall mortality RR 0.86 3.2% improvement in OS Reduction in risk of recurrence RR 0.86 Absolute gain of 2.9% Reduction in breast cancer mortality RR 0.88 Absolute improvement of 1.4% Reduction in overall mortality RR 0.9 Absolute improvement of 1.2%
  • 17. • Affirms the benefit of taxanes when incorporated into the adjuvant setting for women with newly-diagnosed breast cancer • The benefits were seen independent of age, nodal status, tumor size, tumor grade and ER status
  • 18. How to select adjuvant systemic treatment? Do all patients require adjuvant CT?
  • 19. St. Gallen Consensus Conference 2013 National Comprehensive Cancer Network 2013 HER2 positive tumors Adjuvant chemotherapy (no specific size threshold) and trastuzumab Adjuvant chemotherapy and trastuzumab for tumors >0.5 cm and/or node-positive HER2 negative tumors ER negative: Adjuvant chemotherapy (no specific size threshold) ER negative: Adjuvant chemotherapy for tumors ≥ 1.0 cm and/or node positive Consider for tumors 0.5 to 1.0 cm if adverse prognostic factors are present (lymphovascular invasion, high-grade features) HER2 negative tumors ER positive: Adjuvant chemotherapy if 4 or ore lymph nodes are positive Consider if tumor >2 cm, or grade 2-3, or age <35, or lymphovascular invasion is present. Risk stratify by ER/PR/Ki67/Oncotype Dx/ Intrinsic subtype ER positive: Adjuvant chemotherapy if node- positive Risk stratify by Oncotype Dx if node negative (and in select patients with 1-3 involved ipsilateral axillary LN – NCCN 2015) Consider if tumor >1 cm, or if tumor 0.6 to 1.0 cm and lymphovascular invasion or grade 2-3 features are present.
  • 20. Systemic treatment for early breast cancer subtypes Subtype Recommended therapy Luminal A-like ET alone in the majority of cases Consider CT if i) High tumor burden (four or more positive lymph nodes, T3, or higher) ii) Grade III Luminal B-like (HER 2-negative) ET+CT for the majority of the cases Luminal B-like (HER2-positive) CT+ anti-HER2+ ET for all the patients HER2-positive (non-luminal) CT+ anti-HER2 Triple-negative (ductal) CT
  • 21. • * For special histological subtypes: • St. Gallen 2013 recommendations ET for endocrine responsive CT for endocrine non-responsive Cribriform Apocrine Tubular Medullary Mucinous Adenoid cystic Metaplastic
  • 22. Do all patients require adjuvant chemotherapy? • Previously: Based on T size and N status • Now: Tumor biology (Prognosis and variable response to chemotherapy) • IBCSG and CALGB: • Some HR+ breast cancers do not benefit from adjuvant CT and are relatively chemo resistant. They have excellent prognosis with endocrine treatment alone. • * Post menopausal ER+, LN- • Therefore, role of genomics to help us select patients for CT
  • 23. Tools to select patients • Oncotype Dx • Mammaprint • Adjuvant! Online • NPI • Predict score
  • 24. Oncotype Dx or RS assay for patients with ER+, LN- disease: • 16 cancer and 5 reference genes from 3 studies: Category RS 0-100 Low risk RS <18 Intermediate risk RS ≥18 to ≤31 High risk RS ≥ 31
  • 25. • Clinical validation – B14 results • Patients with tumors that have low RS derive minimal if any benefit from CT • Patients with tumors that have high RS have a large absolute benefit from CT
  • 26. NCI Cooperative Groups TAILORx Node-Negative, ER-Positive Breast Cancer Recurrence Score <10 Hormone Therapy Registry RS 11-25 Randomize Hormone Rx vs Chemotherapy + Hormone Rx RS >25 Chemotherapy + Hormone Rx 21-Gene Recurrence Score Assay Register Specimen banking Primary study group
  • 27. • Primary study group: Those with RS between 11 and 25 will be randomized to either hormonal therapy alone or hormonal therapy + chemotherapy. • This corresponds approximately to a risk of recurrence at 10 years of 10%-20%. • Dealer’s choice–type design: Individual investigators can select the type of hormonal therapy and chemotherapy from a list included in the protocol. • The groups do not correspond to the low-, intermediate and high- risk cutoffs found on the Oncotype DX™ report. • The cutoffs in the study were selected to correspond with specific risk levels. • It was felt that it was not ethical to deprive a women of chemotherapy if she had a risk level above 20%.
  • 28. RxPONDER • Rx for Positive node, Endocrine Responsive Breast Cancer trial • Use of 21-gene RS in node positive population
  • 29. Other molecular tools for deciding chemotherapy in node negative patients: • 70-gene signature (Mammaprint):  It uses fresh tissue for microarray analysis  US FDA approval in February 2007  LN negative patients of all ages, ER negative or positive, with tumor size <5 cm  MINDACT trial: phase III RCT  Mammaprint vs. Adjuvant!Online  Selecting patients who are LN negative or 1-3 LN+ for adjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer • PAM50 intrinsic subtype classifier • GGI- Gene Expression Grade Index ( 97-gene measure of histologic grade. High GGI is associated with a lower relapse-free survival)
  • 30. • NPI: Nottingham Prognostic Index • Prognostic scoring system for EBC • Divides patients into 6 prognostic groups based on tumor size, grade and lymph node status • PREDICT: UK prognostic model that predicts survival following surgery for invasive breast cancer
  • 31. • Adjuvant! Online: Web based tool to estimate the net benefit of adjuvant treatment for an individual patient • Estimates prognosis based on tumor size, number of involved LN, grading, ER status • Source: SEER database • Assessment of treatment effect is mainly based on: EBCTCG overview meta-analysis
  • 33. • EBCTCG meta-analysis: benefit of polychemotherapy, anthracyclines and taxanes • Evolution through CMF, AC, FAC and FEC-D • Concurrent anthracycline-taxane vs sequential • Weekly vs 3 weekly taxane • Role of dose dense CT • Role of HDCT
  • 34. History (NSABP trials) • B-01 (1958-61) – Thiotepa vs placebo. Short course perioperative. Advantage in premenopausal, >4 nodes positive • B-05 (1972-75) – L-PAM (L-phenylalanine mustard, Melphalan) for node-positive orally for 2 year. 8% DFS and 5% OS advantage in < 50 years at 10 year follow up • B-10 (1977-81)- immunotherapy – Combination chemotherapy (L-PAM + 5FU) +/- C.parvum and hydrocortisone: no adv • B-11 (1981-84) – {L-PAM + 5-FU} +/- Adriamycin for node-positive and ER-negative tumors • B-13 (1981-88) – chemotherapy (sequential MTX and 5-FU) for node-negative, ER-negative tumors – Benefit at 8 yr in overall DFS (74% v 59%; P < .001) was seen
  • 35. Adjuvant treatment and survival improvement over the past 40 years
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  • 37. CMF • Cyclophosphamide, methotrexate and 5-FU • 1st regimen to show improved DFS and OS in adjuvant treatment of breast cancer • Well tolerated ADR: Fatigue, nausea and diarrhea • Use has diminished with data showing benefit of anthracyclines
  • 38. CMF PO (Classic CMF) Cyclophosphamide 100mg/m2 po d1-d14 Methotrexate 40 mg/m2 iv d1 and d8 5-FU 600mg/m2 iv d1 and d8 CMF iv C 600mg/m2 iv d1 M 40mg/m2 iv d1 and d8 F 600mg/m2 iv d1 Epirubicin---CMF Epirubicin 100 mg/m2 iv q3w* 4 cycles Followed by CMF* 4 cycles N=2391, N+ and N- RFS of ECMF 83% vs 77% OS 88% vs 82%
  • 39. AC • NSABP-B-15 (1984-88) • AC*4=CMF*6 • Findings from 2,194 patients indicate no significant difference in disease-free survival (DFS, P = .5), distant disease-free survival (DDFS, P = .5) or survival (S, P = .8) among the three groups • AC seems preferable since: AC was completed on day 63 versus day 154 for conventional CMF • patients visited health professionals three times as often for conventional CMF as for AC • nausea-control medication was given for about 84 days to conventional CMF patients versus for about 12 days to patients on AC.
  • 40. FAC SECSG Trial in Node-Positive Breast Cancer: Median follow-up of 5 years (n = 528): • No significant difference in overall survival rates (74% vs 68%, P = .415) between CAF and CMF • Major toxicities similar SWOG BREAST INTERGROUP INT0102 TRIAL: CMF vs FAC, in node negative EBC • 10-year estimates indicated that CAF was not significantly better than CMF for DFS (77% v 75%; HR 1.09; 95% CI, 0.94 to 1.27). • CAF had slightly better OS than CMF (85% v 82%, HR 1.19 for CMF v CAF; 95% CI, 0.99 to 1.43) • Toxicity was greater with CAF
  • 41. Role of anthracyclines (contd…) • EBCTCG 2011 meta-analysis • What is the optimal dose? • CALGB 9344: compared 60/75/90 mg/m2 of Adriamycin – no benefit of dose escalation • CALGB 8541: Evaluated 3 doses of anthracyclines – low (30mg/m2), moderate (40 mg/m2) and high (60 mg/m2). Benefit with high dose in OS and RFS in HER2 positive patients.
  • 42. Epirubicin – What is the optimal dose? • 1996: ICCG • Showed that FEC 50 and CMF had similar efficacy in pre- menopausal, node-positive patients • 1998: Dose of Epirubicin (FASG) • FEC-100 vs FEC-50 as adjuvant treatment for patients with Node-positive breast cancer • 5-yr RFS 65% vs 52% (Relative risk reduction 32% P= 0.007) • 5-yr OS 76% vs 65% (Relative risk reduction 31% P=0.007) • CHF/AML/ALL – (1.1%, 0.4%, 0) vs (0.4%, 0, 0.4%)
  • 43. Role of taxanes CALGB 9344 N >3,000 patients A: 60=75=90 mg/m2 P 175 mg/m2 C:600 mg/m2 EBCTCG 2012 5-year DFS 65% vs 70% P= 0.0023 5-year OS 77% vs 80% P= 0.0064
  • 44. PACS 01 trial: FEC-D S U R G E R Y R 6 * FEC100: Arm A 5-FU 500mg/m2 on day 1 Epirubicin 100mg/m2 on day 1 Cyclophosphamide 500mg/m2 on day 1 6 cycles (q3w) FEC-D: Arm B 3 cycles of FEC 100 q21 days followed by 3 cycles of Docetaxel 100 mg/m2 on day 1 Every 21 days Stratified on: Centre Age: < or ≥ 50y Nodes: 1-3; ≥4
  • 45. Key outcomes of PACS-01 • FEC-D • Superior DFS and OS irrespective of number of nodes or hormonal status • 18% reduction in risk of relapse • 23% reduction in risk of death • Significant DFS benefit with FEC-D in ≥ 50 years age group (P= 0.001) • Incidence of FN with FEC-D: 11.2% (vs 24.7% with TAC) • Reduced risks of acute and delayed cardiac events because of 50% less exposure to anthracyclines • FEC-D is a reasonable alternative in patients ≥ 50 years of age.
  • 46. Role of Taxane-based combinations as adjuvant chemotherapy of early breast cancer Concurrent vs sequential BCIRG 005 NSABP-B-30
  • 47. BCIRG 005 • Phase III RCT • TAC (6) vs. AC (4) ---T (4) • EBC – HER2 normal and axillary LN positive
  • 48. BCIRG 005 study design Major eligibility criteria: •HER2 normal by central FISH •Histologically proven node-positive •Stage T1-3, N1, M0 •Age ≤ 70 years, KPS ≥ 80% Primary EP: DFS Secondary EP: OS, safety
  • 50. BCIRG 005 Non-hematological adverse events (Grade 3 or 4 with incidence >1%) TAC N= 1635 AC-T N= 1634 % % P-value Arthralgia 0.9 2.4 0.001 Sensory neuropathy 0.3 1.5 0.0004 Fluid retention 1.3 2.8 0.011 HFS 0 1.8 <0.0001 Myalgia 0.9 4.9 <0.0001
  • 51. Key findings of BCIRG 005 • For the primary endpoint, DFS, adjuvant TAC is equivalent to AC-T in patients with HER2 normal, node positive breast cancer • Despite AC-T delivering higher dose intensity for each of the three agents and requiring 8 cycles, AC-T was not more effective than TAC • Compared to AC-T, TAC is associated with:  More febrile neutropenia and GCSF use.  Less sensory neuropathy, nail change, myalgia and shorter duration of therapy
  • 52. NSABP-B-30 • 1999-2004 • Role of sequential vs concurrent taxanes • 3 arms (AC*4—T*4) vs (AT*4) vs (TAC*4) “Sequential better than concurrent and AT non- inferior to TAC” AC-T AT TAC 8 yr DFS 74% 68% 69% 8 yr OS 83% 79% 79%
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  • 56. BCIRG 001 • TAC vs FAC • 1491 patients, Node+ • Median follow up: 124 months • DFS: 62% (TAC) vs 55% (FAC) (P=0.0043) • 10Y OS: 76% (TAC) vs 69% (FAC) (p=0.0002)
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  • 59. Key findings of CALGB 9741 • At 4 yr: 26% reduction in risk of recurrence and 31% improvement in OS with dose-dense administration. • There was a significant improvement in DFS for dose dense regimen 82 vs 75% • OS also improved(92 vs 90) • Dose density improved DFS and OS, no difference was seen between sequential or concurrent schedule
  • 60. 10-year follow up of Intense Dose-dense chemotherapy vs. Conventional chemotherapy in high-risk patients with ≥4 positive LNs (SABCS 2012) • Rationale: There are no published reports of long- term survival and toxicity data with dose-sense regimens. • Objective: Confirm the Norton Simon hypothesis of dose density and evaluate the safety of epoietin alfa as primary prophylaxis • Study population: High-risk patients having atleast 4 positive LN • All patients in the dose-dense arm received G-CSF
  • 61. R A N D O M I Z E N=1284 Cyclophosphamide 2500 mg/m2 q2w*3 Paclitaxel 225 mg/m2 q2w*3 Epirubicin 150mg/m2 q2w*3 Paclitaxel 175 mg/m2 q3w*4 EC 90/600 mg/m2 q3w*4 +TAM +TAM Primary EP: RFS Secondary EP: OS, QOL, toxicity G-CSF ± epoietin alfa
  • 62. • Efficacy results: • No therapy-related death or long-term toxicity was observed with iddETC • Transfusion results: • Negative impacts of epoietin alfa on RFS and OS were not observed • ; Outcome IDD-ETC EC→T HR (95% CI) P-value 10-yr RFS 56% 47% 0.74 (0.63-0.87) .00014 10-yr OS 4-9 positive LNs 10+ positive LNs 69% 74% 62% 59% 66% 48% 0.72 (0.60-0.87) 0.77 (0.59-1.01) 0.66 (0.51-0.86) .0007 .06 .0016 Transfusion-related outcomes IDD-ETC (n=324) IDD-ETC + EPO (n=319) P-value Median hemoglobin (g/dL) -- -- < .001 (favoring +EPO arm) Need for ≥1 transfusion 28% 13% < .0001 Patients with venous thrombotic event 7% 13% .029
  • 63. Node-negative breast cancer • GEICAM 9805 (FAC vs. TAC) significant toxicity • GEICAM/2003-02 (FAC vs. FAC—wP)
  • 64. GEICAM 9805 (FAC vs TAC) • High-risk, node-negative breast cancer defined according to St. Gallen criteria •18-70 years •Post primary surgery for unilateral operable breast cancer (T1-T3, N0) •≥1 of St. Gallen 1998 high risk criteria: T size > 2cm ER and PR negative Tumor Grade II or III Age <35 y Randomized TAC q3w*6 cycles FAC q3w*6 cycles Primary EP: DFS Sec EP: OS
  • 65. Results of GEICAM 9805 • At a median follow-up of 77 months: • TAC group had 32% reduction in the risk of having an event • Fewer local and distant relapses • Estimated DFS at 5 years: 90.1% in TAC group vs. 85.3% in FAC group • 24% reduction in the risk of death among those who received TAC • Safety: Grade 3 or 4 ADR (TAC> FAC) – asthenia, neutropenia and leucopenia • All grades (TAC> FAC) – Peripheral motor neuropathy, sensory neuropathy, one pain, pyrexia, skin changes, peripheral edema, arthralgia, amenorrhea and myalgia
  • 66. Key findings of GEICAM 9805 • In women with high risk, node negative breast cancer: • TAC significantly improved DFS (32% reduction in risk of recurrence at 77 months) • Benefit from TAC maybe due to hormonal effect in pre-menopausal women (Chemotherapy induced amenorrhea: TAC> FAC) • Post menopausal women also derived benefit from TAC
  • 67. GEICAM/2003-02 study • Node negative breast cancer with high risk of recurrence as per St. Gallen criteria • FAC (6) vs. FAC (4)---wP(8) • Primary EP: DFS • Secondary P: OS
  • 68. GEICAM/2003-02 (contd…) • Results: • At a median follow-up of 63.3 months: • 5Y-DFS: 93% in FAC-wP vs 90.3% in FAC • FAC-wP reduces the risk of relapse by 26.7% compared with FAC (statistically sig.) FAC-wP FAC Grade 3-4 neutropenia 21.8% 25.4% Febrile neutropenia 2.7% 3.6% Fatigue 7.9% 3.4% Sensory neuropathy 5.5% 0 Vomiting 4.3% 4.1% Persistent amenorrhea 15.9% 10.6% Higher incidence of thrombosis with FAC-wP (due to use of steroids)
  • 69. AC vs AC--P • CALGB 9344: 5y DFS 65% vs 70% • OS: 77% vs 80% • NSABP-B-28: 5y DFS:72% vs 76% • OS: 85% vs 85%
  • 71. • As of today, there are no recommendations for choosing the regimen based on Histopathology or Intrinsic subtypes. • Choice of chemotherapy is based on comorbidities, side effects and patient preference.
  • 72. • Endocrine-responsive breast cancer • HER2 positive breast cancer • TNBC * Adjuvant chemotherapy: Which patient? What regimen? (ASCO 2013 Educational book)
  • 73. Endocrine-responsive breast cancer • Luminal A: Node negative- no benefit from adjuvant CT • Node positive: • ? Absolute benefit of CT • Addition of CT to be discussed with the patient
  • 74. • Luminal B: High Ki67 index, aggressive, risk of relapse • Hence, chemotherapy and endocrine therapy are indicated • Choice of CT is based on risk of relapse Luminal B with additional risk factors: pT>1 &/or pN>0 Luminal B without additional high risk factors Sequential anthracyclines- Taxanes Docetaxel/cyclophosphamide Adriamycin/cyclophosphamide CMF Spares toxicity Does not compromise efficacy
  • 75. HER-2 positive breast cancer: • Trastuzumab + Chemotherapy • Major consideration: Whether or not to add an anthracycline • Observed increased sensitivity of HER2+ tumors to anthracyclines is due to TOP2A amplification
  • 76. BCIRG 006 • Phase III trial comparing AC → T with AC → TH and with TCH in the adjuvant treatment of HER2-amplified early breast cancer patients: Third planned efficacy analysis • (Slamon et al, SABCS 2009)
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  • 82. BCIRG 006 (contd..) • Trastuzumab provides a similar and significant advantage for both DFS and OS when used with either ACTH or TCH. • The acute and chronic toxicity profiles of TCH are better than those of ACTH • No statistically significant advantage of ACTH over TCH • CHF was 5* more in ACTH than in TCH
  • 83. • Plan treatment based on risk of relapse: HER2 positive EBC with high risk features (pT >1 and/or pN>0) HER2 positive EBC with low risk features AC-TH TCH
  • 84. TNBC • TNBC with good prognosis: • Adenoid cystic and medullary N- N+ Avoid adjuvant CT Give adjuvant CT even with good prognosis subtype
  • 85. • Other TNBC: • Eg: Metaplastic • Adjuvant CT: Sequential anthracyclines – taxane regimen • TNBC and BRCA-associated breast cancer: • Use of platinum
  • 86. When to start adjuvant CT? • Preferably within 2 to 6 weeks • Significant decrease in the efficacy of chemotherapy is observed when administered more than 12 weeks from surgery How many cycles of adjuvant CT? • 6-8 cycles
  • 87. Early and late long-term effects of adjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer *Breast cancer - ASCO 2013 educational book
  • 88. • Adjuvant CT can lead to early and late long-term side effects for breast cancer survivors. • Effects of CT can vary in severity, but can often negatively affect the QOL and overall health status. • Screening for symptoms, use of supportive medication, referral for specialty consultation as needed • Ongoing research: Evaluate the etiology of toxicity as well as effective interventions
  • 89. Ovarian failure: premature menopause, infertility, sexual dysfunction Hot flashes Atrophic vaginitis Loss of pelvic muscle tone Loss of libido Pretherapy referral to a fertility specialist Assisted reproduction (Ovarian stimulation with AI in the setting of HR+ cancer) Weight gain Reasons: changes in activity level, menopausal status, endocrine manipulation, diet, metabolism and mood Nurses’ Health Study: Weight gain may increase the risk of recurrence Diet Exercise Active lifestyle Bone loss Premature menopause Effect of AI WHI study: increased risk of fracture in post menopausal breast cancer survivors Screen at risk individuals: DEXA q1-2y Timely initiation of bisphosphonates Adequate calcium and Vitamin D Weight bearing exercise
  • 90. Neuropathy: • Peripheral sensory and motor neuropathy – affect QOL • Microtubule inhibitors: Taxanes • Rate and severity of taxane-related neuropathy: agent selection, dose, schedule, comorbidities
  • 91. • Supportive management: • Dose modification and treatment delay • Glutathione, acetyl-l-carnitine, alpha-lipoic acid • Gabapentin, venlafaxine • CALGB 170601: Duloxetine for painful chemotherapy-induced neuropathy • Best management: Avoid toxicity by identification of individuals at highest risk  Higher P-APS scores with first dose of CT may correlate with peripheral neuropathy  Identification of SNPs associated with development of moderate to severe peripheral neuropathy after paclitaxel exposure
  • 92. • * Taxol package insert • Severity is dose dependent • Those with pre-existing neuropathy should be carefully monitored • In severe cases, all subsequent doses of paclitaxel should be reduced by 20%
  • 93. • Cardiac dysfunction: • Left ventricular dysfunction (Anthracyclines and trastuzumab > cyclophosphamide and taxanes) • Prechemotherapy identification of individuals at high risk of toxicity: Older age, pre-existing hypertension, low baseline LVEF, elevated BMI • Cardiac risk score (Age and LVEF) to predict the risk of a cardiac event (NSABP-B-31) • ECHO
  • 94. • Anthracycline mediated cardiotoxicity: • Late-onset (atleast I year after completion of CT) > acute or sub-acute • Permanent cardiomyocyte apoptosis and necrosis • Late onset: irreversible, related to cumulative anthracycline dose, due to free radical formation
  • 95. • Rates of symptomatic or severe cardiac dysfunction in the major trials of adjuvant trastuzumab + anthracycline: maximum of 4.1% • Trastuzumab without chemotherapy/ T without anthracyclines: 0.6% to 1.87% • Rates of asymptomatic drop in cardiac function after anthracycline exposure: 17% to 19%
  • 96. • Neurocognitive dysfunction: • “Chemo brain” • 75% of women: change in cognitive function 2y after treatment (attention, memory and concentration) • Multifactorial: exposure to CT, other modalities of treatment, supportive care medications, menopausal symptoms, anxiety, depression, fatigue, comorbidities • Role of genetic polymorphisms: APOE and COMT • ? Prophylactic or therapeutic modafinil, fluoxetine, CBT
  • 97. • Secondary malignancy: • Rare yet most feared complication – MDS or AML • <1% ( reflect increased cumulative dose) • Concurrent use of growth factors, RT Alkylators Topoisomerase-II targeted agents Examples Cyclophosphamide Anthracyclines Induction period 5-8 y after start of therapy 2-3 y Preceded by MDS yes No Type of translocation Unbalanced Balanced Chromosomes involved Long arm del or monosomy of chr 5 and 7 MLL, RARA, RUNX1 loci of 11q23, 17q21, 21q22
  • 98. Special situations • Very young patient (< 35 years) • Older patients (≥ 65 years) • Isolated local and regional recurrence
  • 99. Very young patient (<35 years) • Young age is an independent risk factor for poor prognosis • Aggressive disease: high incidence of  Hormone insensitive  Undifferentiated  HER2+ tumors • Combination chemotherapy with anthracyclines and taxanes: Luminal B, HER2+, TNBC; even for N- • Gonadal toxicity • Early referral to reproductive specialist
  • 100. Chemotherapy in older patients (≥ 65 years) • Comprehensive geriatric assessment • Balance against: • Risk of toxicity • Poor QOL • Functional decline • Combination CT preferred in  Node+, HR- EBC  HR+, Luminal B  HR-, Node-
  • 101. Polychemotherapy in older patient? CALGB 49907 Age > 65y 60% ≥ 70 R A N D O M I Z E Oral CMF * 6 AC * 4 Capecitabine (X) * 6 cycles Both arms were tolerated well but more toxicity in AC/CMF Median follow-up: 2-4 years CMF/AC vs single agent Capecitabine: Better RFS (p=0.00009) Difference particularly marked in ER negative Polychemotherapy is relevant in the elderly population RFS
  • 102. CALOR: Adjuvant CT for ILRR (SABCS 2012) • Rationale: isolated local or regional recurrence (ILRR) of breast cancer has poor prognosis • No randomized studies of adjuvant chemotherapy for ILRR have been published in the last 30 years • Objective: Evaluate the effect of adjuvant chemotherapy on patients with ILRR • Sample size: Original 977 • Due to slow accrual, only 162 patients were randomized
  • 103. • Chemotherapy chosen by investigators • At least 2 drugs, 3-6 months of therapy R A N D O M I Z E +Endocrine therapy for HR-positive disease + HER2-directed therapy (optional) + RT (mandatory for those with positive margins) Adjuvant chemotherapy No chemotherapy Eligibility criteria: •First ILRR •Complete gross excision of recurrence •No evidence of positive SCLN •No evidence of distant metastasis CALOR trial (contd..)
  • 104. CALOR trial (contd..) • Results: Site of first failure (after ILRR) Chemotherap y* (n=85) No chemotherapy* (n=77) Total failures 24 34 Local/regional 6 (25%) 9 (26%) Distant Soft tissue Bone Viscera 15 (63%) 0 8 7 22 (65%) 2 5 15 Contralateral breast 1 (4%) 1 (3%) Secondary non-breast malignancy 1 (4%) 0 Deaths without failure 1 (4%) 2 (6%)
  • 105. CALOR trial (contd…) • Efficacy results: • Multivariate analysis showed treatment (chemo/ no chemo) to have significant impact on both DFS and OS Survival Chemotherapy No chemotherapy HR (95% CI) P-value 5-yr DFS ER-positive ER-negative 69% 70% 67% 57% 69% 35% 0.59 (0.35-0.99) 0.94 (0.47-1.89) 0.32 (0.14-0.73) .046 .87 .007 5-yr OS ER-positive ER-negative 88% 94% 79% 76% 80% 69% 0.41 (0.19-0.89) 0.40 (0.12-1.28) 0.43 (0.15-1.24) .02 .12 .12
  • 106. Considerations for the future • These need further validation in large cohorts: Disseminated tumor cells (DTC) on BMA assessment •Prognostic in EBC •Marker of recurrence Circulating tumor cells (CTC) Poor survival after NACT or primary breast cancer surgery cf-DNA (cell free-DNA) Plasma miRNA Markers of relapse in EBC
  • 107. Debate about anthracyclines in HER2 + Does HER2 over-expression confer a unique and/or inherent sensitivity to anthracyclines? • The Topoisomerase IIα Protein 1s a major target of the anthracyclines • Current data indicate that it is the TOP2A gene amplification and not HER2 that is responsible for improved anthracycline sensitivity • TOP2A amplification occurs ONLY in 35% of the 25% of breast cancer patients with HER2 amplification “only 8% of breast cancer patients” • Moreover, for HER2-positive breast cancers, trastuzumab appears to replace the gained efficacy of anthracyclines in the one third of patients with co-amplification of HER2 and TOP2A
  • 108. Predicting anthracycline benefit: TOP2A and CEP17 • Meta-analysis of adjuvant trials that compared anthracycline-based regimen with CMF – HER2 amplification and combined TOP2A amplification or deletion may have some value in the prediction of response to anthracycline- based CT, findings do not support the use of anthracyclines only in patients with HER2- amplified or TOP2A aberrated tumors.
  • 109. questions • Concept of adjuvant CT in ca breast? • Which subtype of pt as per ebctcg do not require CT? • Subgroup analysis of dose dense CT??