Amplifications of Stemness Gene Loci-New Markers for the Determination of the Need for Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy for Patients with Breast Cancer. A Prospective Study.
Nikolai V LitvyakovMarina K IbragimovaMatvey M TsyganovPolina V KazantsevaArtem V DoroshenkoEugeniy Yu GarbukovIrina G FrolovaElena M SlonimskayaPublished in: Journal of personalized medicine (2021)
In this prospective study, a new strategy for the prescription of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) was prospectively tested and depended on the presence of stemness gene amplifications in the tumor before treatment, which in our early studies showed a connection with metastasis. The study included 92 patients with grade IIA-IIIB luminal B breast cancer. Patients underwent a biopsy before treatment, and with the use of a CytoScan HD Array microarray (Affymetrix, Santa Clara, CA, USA), the presence of stemness gene amplifications (3q, 5p, 6p, 7q, 8q, 13q, 9p, 9q, 10p, 10q21.1, 16p, 18chr, 19p) in the tumor was determined. In group 1 (n = 41), in the presence of two or more amplifications, patients were prescribed a personalized NAC regimen. In group 2 (n = 21), if there was no amplification of stemness genes in the tumor, then patients were not prescribed NAC, and treatment began with surgery. Group 3 (n = 30) served as a historical control. The frequency of an objective response to NAC in groups 1 and 3 was 79%. Nonmetastatic survival was found in 100% of patients in group 2, who did not undergo NAC. In patients in group 1, the frequency of metastasis was 10% (4/41). At the same time, in patients in group 3, who received NAC, the rate of metastasis was 47% (14/30). The differences between group 1 and group 3 and between group 2 and group 3 were statistically significant, both by Fisher's criterion and a log-rank test. The appointment of NAC was most feasible in patients with clones with stemness gene amplifications in the primary tumor, while in the absence of amplifications, preoperative chemotherapy led to a sharp decrease in metastasis-free survival. This strategy of NAC prescription allowed us to achieve 93% metastatic survival in patients with breast cancer.
Keyphrases
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- end stage renal disease
- transcription factor
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- stem cells
- prognostic factors
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- genome wide
- small cell lung cancer
- gene expression
- locally advanced
- free survival
- acute coronary syndrome
- dna methylation
- patient reported outcomes
- patients undergoing
- mass spectrometry
- combination therapy
- rectal cancer
- simultaneous determination
- fine needle aspiration
- replacement therapy
- coronary artery bypass