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Multifocal/Multicentric Ipsilateral Invasive Breast Carcinomas with Similar Histology: Is Multigene Testing of All Individual Foci Necessary?

Grabenstetter, Anne; Brogi, Edi; Chou, Joanne F; Morrow, Monica; Dickler, Maura; Norton, Larry; Wen, Hannah Y
BACKGROUND:Multiple synchronous ipsilateral invasive breast carcinomas (BCs) with similar histology usually have concordant receptor status. It is unknown whether individual foci with similar histology also share molecular and biological similarities or are heterogenous. This study examined the concordance of the 21-gene recurrence score (RS) in multiple synchronous morphologically similar ipsilateral BCs. PATIENTS AND METHODS/METHODS:We identified patients with multiple ipsilateral BCs and available RS treated at our institution from 1/2014 to 6/2018. BCs were divided into three groups based on RS: (1) RS in same risk category, (2) RS in different risk categories but within 2-unit difference (e.g., RS 17 and RS 19), and (3) RS in different risk categories and a change of > 2 units. BCs in groups 1 and 2 were considered as concordant (no significant clinical impact) and BCs in group 3 as discordant (variation affects management). RESULTS:A total of 53 patients met the study criteria. RS was concordant in 46 (87%) cases. Seven (13%) cases were discordant (group 3). Of these, three (43%, 3/7) had biopsy cavity changes (BXC) adjacent to the BC with highest RS. In two cases the focus with higher RS had a lower percentage of progesterone receptor-positive tumor cells. In two cases, extensive ductal carcinoma in situ was associated with the BC focus with lower RS. CONCLUSIONS:Morphologically similar multifocal ipsilateral BCs have concordant RS in 87% (46/53) of cases. Our results suggest that, in cases of morphologically similar multifocal BCs, testing of a single focus provides accurate prognostic and predictive information.
PMCID:6613395
PMID: 30298311
ISSN: 1534-4681
CID: 4134802

Reply to "Multicentric Ipsilateral Invasive Breast Carcinomas Might Have Higher 21-Gene Recurrence Score Compared with Multifocal Ipsilateral Invasive Breast Carcinomas" [Comment]

Grabenstetter, Anne; Brogi, Edi; Chou, Joanne; Morrow, Monica; Dickler, Maura; Norton, Larry; Wen, Hannah
PMID: 30456683
ISSN: 1534-4681
CID: 4134812

A rigorous evaluation of an institutionally-based communication skills program for post-graduate oncology trainees

Bylund, Carma L; Banerjee, Smita C; Bialer, Philip A; Manna, Ruth; Levin, Tomer T; Parker, Patricia A; Schofield, Elizabeth; Li, Yuelin; Bartell, Abraham; Chou, Alexander; Hichenberg, Shira A; Dickler, Maura; Kissane, David W
OBJECTIVE:Integrating education about physician-patient communication into oncology specialists' education is important to improve quality of care. Our aim was to rigorously evaluate a 4-year institutionally-based patient communication skills program for oncology post-graduate trainees. METHODS:Trainees from 10 specialties in the U.S. participated in patient communication skills modules tailored to sub-specialties. The program was evaluated by comparing pre-post scores on hierarchical outcomes: course evaluation, self-confidence, skills uptake in standardized and real patient encounters, and patient evaluations of satisfaction with communication. We examined breadth of skill usage as key outcome. Generalized estimating equations were used in data analysis. RESULTS:Two hundred and sixty-two trainees' data were analyzed, resulting in 984 standardized and 753 real patient encounters. Participants reported high satisfaction and demonstrated significant skill growth with standardized patients, but transfer of these skills into real patient encounters was incomplete. Participants with lower baseline scores had larger improvements with both standardized and real patients. CONCLUSION:The program was well received and increased participant skills in the simulated setting without effective transfer to real patient encounters. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS:Future work should allocate proportionally greater resources to trainees with lower baseline scores and measure breadth of participant skill usage as an outcome.
PMCID:6755908
PMID: 29880404
ISSN: 1873-5134
CID: 4134772

Phase II Study of Paclitaxel and Dasatinib in Metastatic Breast Cancer

Morris, Patrick G; Rota, Selene; Cadoo, Karen; Zamora, Stephen; Patil, Sujata; D'Andrea, Gabriella; Gilewski, Theresa; Bromberg, Jacqueline; Dang, Chau; Dickler, Maura; Modi, Shanu; Seidman, Andrew D; Sklarin, Nancy; Norton, Larry; Hudis, Clifford A; Fornier, Monica N
BACKGROUND:Overexpression and activation of tyrosine kinase Src has been linked to breast carcinogenesis and bone metastases. We showed the feasibility of combining the SRC inhibitor dasatinib with weekly paclitaxel in patients with metastatic breast cancer (MBC) and herein report the subsequent phase II trial. PATIENTS AND METHODS:Patients had received ≤ 2 chemotherapy regimens for measurable, HER2-negative MBC. Patients received paclitaxel and dasatinib (120 mg daily) and were assessed according to Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors for overall response rate (ORR), the primary end point. Secondary end points included progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS). A 30% ORR (n = 55) was deemed worthy of further investigation. Exploratory biomarkers included N-telopeptide (NTX) and plasma vascular epidermal growth factor (VEGF) receptor 2 as predictors of clinical benefit. RESULTS:From March 2010 to March 2014, 40 patients, including 2 men enrolled. The study was stopped early because of slow accrual. Overall, 32 patients (80%) had estrogen receptor-positive tumors and 23 (58%) had previously received taxanes. Of the 35 assessable patients, 1 (3%) had complete response and 7 (20%) partial response, resulting in an ORR of 23%. The median PFS and OS was 5.2 (95% confidence interval [CI], 2.9-9.9) and 20.6 (95% CI, 12.9-25.2) months, respectively. As expected, fatigue (75%), neuropathy (65%), and diarrhea (50%) were common side effects, but were generally low-grade. Median baseline NTX was similar in patients who had clinical benefit (8.2 nmol BCE) and no clinical benefit (10.9 nmol BCE). Similarly, median baseline VEGF levels were similar between the 2 groups; 93.0 pg/mL versus 83.0 pg/mL. CONCLUSION:This phase II study of dasatinib and paclitaxel was stopped early because of slow accrual but showed some clinical activity. Further study is not planned.
PMID: 29680193
ISSN: 1938-0666
CID: 4134732

Phase II Study of Taselisib (GDC-0032) in Combination with Fulvestrant in Patients with HER2-Negative, Hormone Receptor-Positive Advanced Breast Cancer

Dickler, Maura N; Saura, Cristina; Richards, Donald A; Krop, Ian E; Cervantes, Andrés; Bedard, Philippe L; Patel, Manish R; Pusztai, Lajos; Oliveira, Mafalda; Cardenas, Alison K; Cui, Na; Wilson, Timothy R; Stout, Thomas J; Wei, Michael C; Hsu, Jerry Y; Baselga, José
Purpose: This single-arm, open-label phase II study evaluated the safety and efficacy of taselisib (GDC-0032) plus fulvestrant in postmenopausal women with locally advanced or metastatic HER2-negative, hormone receptor (HR)-positive breast cancer.Patients and Methods: Patients received 6-mg oral taselisib capsules daily plus intramuscular fulvestrant (500 mg) until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. Tumor tissue (if available) was centrally evaluated for PIK3CA mutations. Adverse events (AE) were recorded using NCI-CTCAE v4.0. Tumor response was investigator-determined using RECIST v1.1.Results: Median treatment duration was 4.6 (range: 0.9-40.5) months. All patients experienced ≥1 AE, 30 (50.0%) had grade ≥3 AEs, and 19 (31.7%) experienced 35 serious AEs. Forty-seven of 60 patients had evaluable tissue for central PIK3CA mutation testing [20 had mutations, 27 had no mutation detected (MND)]. In patients with baseline measurable disease, clinical activity was observed in tumors with PIK3CA mutations [best confirmed response rate: 38.5% (5/13; 95% CI, 13.9-68.4); clinical benefit rate (CBR): 38.5% (5/13; 95% CI, 13.9-68.4)], PIK3CA-MND [best confirmed response rate: 14.3% (3/21; 95% CI, 3.0-36.3); CBR: 23.8% (5/21; 95% CI, 8.2-47.2)], and unknown PIK3CA mutation status [best confirmed response rate: 20.0% (2/10; 95% CI, 2.5-55.6); CBR: 30.0% (3/10; 95% CI, 6.7-65.2)].Conclusions: Taselisib plus fulvestrant had clinical activity irrespective of PIK3CA mutation status, with numerically higher objective response rate and CBR in patients with PIK3CA-mutated (vs. -MND) locally advanced or metastatic HER2-negative, HR-positive breast cancer. No new safety signals were reported. A confirmatory phase III trial is ongoing. Clin Cancer Res; 24(18); 4380-7. ©2018 AACR.
PMCID:6139036
PMID: 29793946
ISSN: 1078-0432
CID: 4134762

The Genomic Landscape of Endocrine-Resistant Advanced Breast Cancers

Razavi, Pedram; Chang, Matthew T; Xu, Guotai; Bandlamudi, Chaitanya; Ross, Dara S; Vasan, Neil; Cai, Yanyan; Bielski, Craig M; Donoghue, Mark T A; Jonsson, Philip; Penson, Alexander; Shen, Ronglai; Pareja, Fresia; Kundra, Ritika; Middha, Sumit; Cheng, Michael L; Zehir, Ahmet; Kandoth, Cyriac; Patel, Ruchi; Huberman, Kety; Smyth, Lillian M; Jhaveri, Komal; Modi, Shanu; Traina, Tiffany A; Dang, Chau; Zhang, Wen; Weigelt, Britta; Li, Bob T; Ladanyi, Marc; Hyman, David M; Schultz, Nikolaus; Robson, Mark E; Hudis, Clifford; Brogi, Edi; Viale, Agnes; Norton, Larry; Dickler, Maura N; Berger, Michael F; Iacobuzio-Donahue, Christine A; Chandarlapaty, Sarat; Scaltriti, Maurizio; Reis-Filho, Jorge S; Solit, David B; Taylor, Barry S; Baselga, José
We integrated the genomic sequencing of 1,918 breast cancers, including 1,501 hormone receptor-positive tumors, with detailed clinical information and treatment outcomes. In 692 tumors previously exposed to hormonal therapy, we identified an increased number of alterations in genes involved in the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway and in the estrogen receptor transcriptional machinery. Activating ERBB2 mutations and NF1 loss-of-function mutations were more than twice as common in endocrine resistant tumors. Alterations in other MAPK pathway genes (EGFR, KRAS, among others) and estrogen receptor transcriptional regulators (MYC, CTCF, FOXA1, and TBX3) were also enriched. Altogether, these alterations were present in 22% of tumors, mutually exclusive with ESR1 mutations, and associated with a shorter duration of response to subsequent hormonal therapies.
PMCID:6327853
PMID: 30205045
ISSN: 1878-3686
CID: 4134792

Identification of risk factors for toxicity in patients with hormone receptor-positive advanced breast cancer treated with bevacizumab plus letrozole: a CALGB 40503 (alliance) correlative study

Li, Daneng; McCall, Linda M; Hahn, Olwen M; Hudis, Clifford A; Cohen, Harvey J; Muss, Hyman B; Jatoi, Aminah; Lafky, Jacqueline M; Ballman, Karla V; Winer, Eric P; Tripathy, Debu; Schneider, Bryan; Barry, William; Dickler, Maura N; Hurria, Arti
BACKGROUND:In hormone receptor-positive advanced breast cancer, a progression-free survival benefit was reported with addition of bevacizumab to first-line letrozole. However, increased toxicity was observed. We hypothesized that functional age measures could be used to identify patients at risk for toxicity while receiving letrozole plus bevacizumab for hormone receptor-positive advanced breast cancer. METHODS:CALGB 40503 was a phase III trial that enrolled patients with hormone receptor-positive advanced breast cancer randomized to letrozole with or without bevacizumab. Patients randomized to bevacizumab were approached to complete a validated assessment tool evaluating physical function, comorbidity, cognition, psychological state, social support, and nutritional status. The relationship between pretreatment assessment measures and the incidence of grade ≥ 3 (National Cancer Institute Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events Version 3.0) adverse events was determined. RESULTS:One hundred thirteen (58%) of 195 patients treated with letrozole plus bevacizumab completed the pretreatment assessment questionnaire. One patient was excluded due to missing adverse event data. The median age of patients was 56. Frequently reported grade ≥ 3 adverse events were hypertension (26%), pain (20%), and proteinuria (7%). Two hemorrhagic events (one grade 5) and 1 thrombosis event occurred. Age ≥ 65 years (p < 0.01), decreased vision (p = 0.04), and poorer pretreatment physical function measures (p < 0.05) were found on univariate analysis to be significantly associated with increased incidence of grade ≥ 3 adverse events. Upon multivariate analysis, age ≥ 65 years (p = 0.01) and decreased vision (p = 0.04) remained significant. Univariable and multivariable logistic regression models demonstrated associations between age, vision, the ability to walk up flights of stairs, and grade ≥ 3 adverse events. CONCLUSIONS:Age (≥ 65 years), decreased vision, and impairments in physical function correlated with increased incidence of toxicity in patients receiving first-line letrozole plus bevacizumab. When evaluating therapy likely to increase toxicity, functional assessment measures can identify patients at increased risk for side effects who may benefit from closer monitoring.
PMCID:6076849
PMID: 29789969
ISSN: 1573-7217
CID: 4134752

A phase IIA trial of acupuncture to reduce chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy severity during neoadjuvant or adjuvant weekly paclitaxel chemotherapy in breast cancer patients

Bao, Ting; Seidman, Andrew D; Piulson, Lauren; Vertosick, Emily; Chen, Xi; Vickers, Andrew J; Blinder, Victoria S; Zhi, Wanqing I; Li, Qing; Vahdat, Linda T; Dickler, Maura N; Robson, Mark E; Mao, Jun J
PURPOSE:Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) is a common and potentially dose-limiting side-effect of neurotoxic chemotherapy for cancer patients. We evaluated the preliminary efficacy of acupuncture in preventing worsening CIPN in patients receiving paclitaxel. METHODS:In this phase IIA single-arm clinical trial, we screened stage I-III breast cancer patients receiving neoadjuvant/adjuvant weekly paclitaxel for development of CIPN. The primary objective was to assess acupuncture's efficacy in preventing the escalation of National Cancer Institute-Common Toxicity Criteria for Adverse Events (NCI-CTCAE), version 4.0, grade II CIPN to higher grades. Acupuncture was deemed worthy of further study if 23 or more of the 27 enrolled patients did not develop grade III CIPN. Outcome measures (NCI-CTCAE CIPN grade, Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy/Gynecologic Oncology Group-Neurotoxicity [FACT/GOG-Ntx], Neuropathic Pain Scale [NPS]) were obtained weekly during the intervention. RESULTS:Of 104 patients screened, 37 developed grade II CIPN (36%), and 28 (27%) enrolled into the intervention phase; one was removed due to protocol violation. Of the 27 patients receiving acupuncture, 26 completed paclitaxel treatment without developing grade III CIPN, meeting our prespecified success criteria for declaring acupuncture worthy of further study. FACT/GOG-Ntx and NPS scores remained stable during the intervention while continuing weekly paclitaxel. Acupuncture treatment was well tolerated; 4 of 27 (15%) patients reported grade I bruising. CONCLUSIONS:Acupuncture was safe and showed preliminary evidence of effectiveness in reducing the incidence of high grade CIPN during chemotherapy. A follow-up randomised controlled trial is needed to establish definitive efficacy in CIPN prevention for patients at risk.
PMCID:6147260
PMID: 30007894
ISSN: 1879-0852
CID: 4134782

Feasibility, safety, and efficacy of aerobic training in pretreated patients with metastatic breast cancer: A randomized controlled trial

Scott, Jessica M; Iyengar, Neil M; Nilsen, Tormod S; Michalski, Meghan; Thomas, Samantha M; Herndon, James; Sasso, John; Yu, Anthony; Chandarlapaty, Sarat; Dang, Chau T; Comen, Elizabeth A; Dickler, Maura N; Peppercorn, Jeffrey M; Jones, Lee W
BACKGROUND:The investigation of exercise training in metastatic breast cancer has received minimal attention. This study determined the feasibility and safety of aerobic training in metastatic breast cancer. METHODS:and functional capacity), and patient-reported outcomes (PROs; quality of life). RESULTS:and functional capacity (P values < .05). CONCLUSIONS:Aerobic training at the dose and schedule tested is safe but not feasible for a significant proportion of patients with metastatic breast cancer. The acceptable feasibility and promising benefit for select patients warrant further evaluation in a dose-finding phase 1/2 study. Cancer 2018;124:2552-60. © 2018 American Cancer Society.
PMCID:5990447
PMID: 29624641
ISSN: 1097-0142
CID: 4134722

The 21-Gene Recurrence Score in Male Breast Cancer

Turashvili, Gulisa; Gonzalez-Loperena, Monica; Brogi, Edi; Dickler, Maura; Norton, Larry; Morrow, Monica; Wen, Hannah Y
BACKGROUND:Given the limited data, systemic treatment of male breast cancer has been extrapolated from female patients. The 21-gene recurrence score (RS) assay estimates the risk of distant recurrence and chemotherapy benefit in early-stage, ER+/HER2- female breast cancer. We assessed the association between RS and type of treatment in male breast cancer. METHODS:We identified male patients with ER+/HER2- breast cancer and available RS results treated at our institution in 2006-2016. We collected data on clinicopathologic features, treatment, and outcome. The Institutional Review Board approved the study. RESULTS:The study cohort consists of 38 male breast cancer patients with a median age of 70 years. Median tumor size was 1.6 cm, and 81.6% (31) were node-negative. RS was low (≤ 17) in 26 (68.4%) cases, intermediate (18-30) in 9 (23.7%) cases, and high (≥ 31) in 3 (7.9%) cases, comparable to that in female patients at our institution. All patients underwent total mastectomy, and one received radiotherapy. Thirty-four (89.5%) patients received adjuvant endocrine therapy, mostly tamoxifen (81.6%; 31). Five (13.2%) patients with intermediate or high RS were treated with adjuvant chemotherapy. No locoregional recurrence was observed, and one patient developed distant recurrence (median follow-up 34 months). CONCLUSIONS:The RS distribution in male breast cancers was similar to that in females treated at our institution. With limited follow-up, patients with low RS were spared chemotherapy and did not develop recurrence. Our results suggest that the RS may have a clinical utility in male breast cancer patients.
PMCID:5930124
PMID: 29520654
ISSN: 1534-4681
CID: 4134712