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The 70-gene signature as a response predictor for neoadjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer.

Marieke E Straver ,
Annuska M Glas ,
Juliane Hannemann ,
Jelle Wesseling ,
Marc J van de Vijver ,
Emiel J Th Rutgers ,
Marie-Jeanne T F D Vrancken Peeters ,
Harm van Tinteren ,
Laura J Van't Veer ,
Sjoerd Rodenhuis

Abstract

The 70-gene signature (MammaPrint) is a prognostic tool used to guide adjuvant treatment decisions. The aim of this study was to assess its value to predict chemosensitivity in the neoadjuvant setting. We obtained the 70-gene profile of stage II-III patients prior to neoadjuvant chemotherapy and classified the prognosis-signatures. Pathological complete remission (pCR) was used to measure chemosensitivity. Among 167 patients, 144 (86%) were having a poor and 23 (14%) a good prognosis-signature. None of the good prognosis-signature patients achieved a pCR (0/23), whereas 29/144 patients (20%) in the poor prognosis-signature group did (P = 0.015). All triple-negative tumors (n = 38) had a poor prognosis-signature. Within the non triple-negative subgroup, the response of the primary tumor remained associated with the classification of the prognosis-signature (P = 0.023). A pCR is unlikely to be achieved in tumors that have a good prognosis-signature. Tumors with a poor prognosis-signature are more sensitive to chemotherapy.

More about this publication

Breast cancer research and treatment

Volume 119
Issue nr. 3
Pages 551-8
Publication date 01-02-2010

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1007/s10549-009-0333-1
Europe PubMed Central 19214742
Pubmed 19214742

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