Abstract
Abstract Background: Adjuvant endocrine therapy compromises bone health in pre- and postmenopausal breast cancer (BC) patients. Bisphosphonates have been shown to prevent and counteract these side effects of endocrine therapy, and to improve disease-free and overall survival outcomes in postmenopausal (natural or induced) BC patients (EBCTCG meta-analysis, Lancet 2015). The aim of ABCSG-18 was to investigate the effects of adjuvant anti-RANK-ligand Denosumab on bone health and disease outcomes in postmenopausal patients with early hormone receptor+ (HR+) BC receiving AI treatment. Patients and Methods: 3,425 postmenopausal patients with HR+ BC receiving AI were recruited in 58 trial sites into this prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase-III trial. Patients were randomized 1:1 to either Denosumab 60mg or placebo q6mo s.c. Bone end point results showed that adjuvant denosumab significantly reduced clinical fractures (primary endpoint, HR=0.5, p<0.0001), improved bone mineral density, and reduced vertebral fractures without relevant toxicity (Gnant et al., Lancet 2015). Disease-free survival (DFS) is a secondary endpoint. Following an IDMC recommendation based on the results of a protocol-specified interim analysis, a DFS analysis took place in September 2015, before a patients' choice unblinding option will be provided to trial patients in the year 2016. Additional disease outcome related end points (BMFS, OS) will be analysed during further study follow up. Results: With a median follow-up of 4 years, 370 DFS events were recorded. 203 DFS events occurred in the placebo group, and 167 in the Denosumab group (HR 0.816, p=0.051). Subgroup analyses indicate that the Denosumab benefit (overall absolute 2.1% at 5 years) may be particularly driven by tumors larger than 2cm (HR=0.66, p=0.016), ductal breast cancer histology type (HR=0.79, p=0.048), and tumors with both ER and PR positive (HR=0.75, p=0.013). Summary and conclusion: Adjuvant Denosumab 60mg q6mo s.c. improves disease-free survival of HR+ breast cancer patients receiving aromatase inhibitors. Numerically, this benefit of adjuvant Denosumab is at least comparable to the DFS-benefit of adjuvant bisphosphonates. Bases on these results and the previously reported dramatic reduction of fractures, adjuvant Denosumab should be offered to all postmenopausal HR+ breast cancer patients on AI. Citation Format: Gnant M, Pfeiler G, Dubsky PC, Hubalek M, Greil R, Jakesz R, Wette V, Balic M, Haslbauer F, Melbinger-Zeinitzer E, Bjelic-Radisic V, Artner-Matuschek S, Fitzal F, Marth C, Sevelda P, Mlineritsch B, Steger GG, Manfreda D, Exner R, Egle D, Bergh J, Kainberger F, Talbot S, Warner D, Fesl C, Singer CF, On behalf of the Austrian Breast and Colorectal Cancer Study Group. The impact of adjuvant denosumab on disease-free survival: Results from 3,425 postmenopausal patients of the ABCSG-18 trial. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Thirty-Eighth Annual CTRC-AACR San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium: 2015 Dec 8-12; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2016;76(4 Suppl):Abstract nr S2-02.
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