A new genomic test designed to measure endocrine sensitivity of estrogen receptor positive breast cancer has the potential to identify patients diagnosed with ER+ breast cancer who could benefit more from dose dense chemotherapy, a regimen in which chemotherapy is administered more frequently than normal, when compared to non-dose dense regimens, research by Dana-Farber shows.
The investigators found that women with ER+ breast cancer that scores low for a biomarker called SET2,3 (i.e., indicating endocrine resistance) benefited far more from dose-dense chemotherapy than patients with higher scores.
The results applied to pre- as well as postmenopausal women.
If confirmed by future studies, the biomarker could be the basis for the first test for identifying which of these patients diagnosed with ER+ breast cancer stands to have the best responses to dose-dense chemotherapy, says study presenter Otto Metzger, MD, of Dana-Farber.
The SET2,3 (sensitivity to endocrine therapy) index measures the activity of genes involved in estrogen and progesterone receptor signalling and excludes genes related to cell proliferation.
A high SET2,3 score – indicates higher endocrine sensitivity, potentially deriving greater benefits from adjuvant endocrine therapy.
For the new study, researchers did SET2,3 testing on 682 tumour samples from women with ER+ breast cancer who participated in the CALGB 9471 clinical trial, which compared dose-dense chemotherapy schedules to conventional schedules. (Dose-dense treatment involves administering chemotherapy every two weeks rather than every three weeks.)
They found that patients with highly endocrine-sensitive tumours – and high SET2,3 scores – lived longer before their disease returned, and lived longer overall, than patients with less-sensitive tumours.
They further found that SET2,3 was a far better indicator of patients’ prognosis than an often-used genomic test of tumour cell proliferation named PAM50.
The investigators then explored whether SET2,3 could fill the need for a test to identify patients with ER+ breast cancer who are likely to derive a greater magnitude of benefit with dose-dense chemotherapy following surgery for operable breast cancer.
The findings can be summarised as follows: SET2,3 identifies patients diagnosed with ER+ breast cancer with significantly lower chances of experiencing disease recurrence.
SET2,3 outperformed PAM50 in its ability to predict patient’s outcome and in its ability to identify a subset of patients experiencing greater benefits with dose-dense chemotherapy.
Metzger says this highlights the importance of evaluating endocrine sensitivity to estimate prognosis and potentially tailor therapies for patients facing a breast cancer diagnosis.
Source: Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
We are an independent charity and are not backed by a large company or society. We raise every penny ourselves to improve the standards of cancer care through education. You can help us continue our work to address inequalities in cancer care by making a donation.
Any donation, however small, contributes directly towards the costs of creating and sharing free oncology education.
Together we can get better outcomes for patients by tackling global inequalities in access to the results of cancer research.
Thank you for your support.