Prospective Validation of a 21-Gene Expression Assay in Breast Cancer
University of Maryland, Baltimore · Juravinski Cancer Centre · +39 more institutions
Abstract
Prior studies with the use of a prospective-retrospective design including archival tumor samples have shown that gene-expression assays provide clinically useful prognostic information. However, a prospectively conducted study in a uniformly treated population provides the highest level of evidence supporting the clinical validity and usefulness of a biomarker.
We performed a prospective trial involving women with hormone-receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor type 2 (HER2)-negative, axillary node-negative breast cancer with tumors of 1.1 to 5.0 cm in the greatest dimension (or 0.6 to 1.0 cm in the greatest dimension and intermediate or high tumor grade) who met established guidelines for the consideration of adjuvant chemotherapy on the basis of clinicopathologic features. A reverse-transcriptase-polymerase-chain-reaction assay of 21 genes was performed on the paraffin-embedded tumor tissue, and the results were used to calculate a score indicating the risk of breast-cancer recurrence; patients were assigned to receive endocrine therapy without chemotherapy if they had a recurrence score of 0 to 10, indicating a very low risk of recurrence (on a scale of 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating a greater risk of recurrence).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 62.16
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 39
Authors
31- JAJoseph A. SparanoCorresponding
University of Maryland, Baltimore, Juravinski Cancer Centre, Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine
- RJRobert J. Gray
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
- DMDella Makower
Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine
- KIKathleen I. Pritchard
Sunnybrook Hospital, Sunnybrook Research Institute
- KSKathy S. Albain
Loyola University Medical Center
Topics & keywords
- Biomarker
- Breast cancer
- Oncology
- Prospective cohort study
- Medicine
- Internal medicine
- Cancer
- Gene expression
- Good health and well-being
Funding
- ACAmerican College of Radiology Imaging Network
- VUVanderbilt University
- EUEmory University
- NUNorthwestern University
- WFWake Forest University
- JHJohns Hopkins University
- UOUniversity of Pittsburgh
- VCVirginia Commonwealth University
- SRSunnybrook Research Institute
- ECECOG-ACRIN Cancer Research Group
- YUYonsei University
- NINational Institutes of Health
- UOUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- SOSchool of Medicine, Indiana University
- SOSchool of Medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University
- YUYonsei University College of Medicine
- NCNational Cancer Institute