Abstract

This clinical practice guideline was developed to determine the level of evidence supporting the clinical utility of commercially available multigene profiling assays and to provide guidance about whether certain breast cancer patient populations in Ontario would benefit from alternative tests in addition to Oncotype dx (Genomic Health, Redwood City, CA, U.S.A.). A systematic electronic Ovid search of the medline and embase databases sought out systematic reviews and primary literature. A systematic review and practice guideline was written by a working group and was then reviewed and approved by Cancer Care Ontario's Molecular Oncology Advisory Committee. Twenty-four studies assessing the clinical utility of Oncotype dx, Prosigna (NanoString Technologies, Seattle, WA, U.S.A.), EndoPredict (Myriad Genetics, Salt Lake City, U.S.A.), and MammaPrint (Agendia, Irvine, CA, U.S.A.) were included in the evidence base. The clinical utility of multigene profiling assays is currently established for an appropriate subset of patients with estrogen receptor-positive, her2-negative, node-negative breast cancer for whom a decision to give chemotherapy is difficult to make. For patients with estrogen receptor-positive tumours who receive tamoxifen alone, Oncotype dx, Prosigna, and EndoPredict validly identify a low-risk population with favourable outcomes, indicating that a low-risk assay result is actionable and the decision to withhold chemotherapy is supported. Clinical evidence indicates that a high Oncotype dx recurrence score can predict for chemotherapy benefit, but a high Prosigna or EndoPredict score, although prognostic, is not, based on clinical trial evidence, directly actionable. Prosigna and EndoPredict are statistically more likely to identify a population at risk for recurrence beyond 5 years, but that information is currently not actionable because of a lack of interventional studies.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease, and risk of recurrence depends on several factors, including tumour size, histologic grade, regional lymph node involvement, lymphovascular invasion, and expression of both the estrogen and progesterone hormone receptors, and on her[2] protein overexpression or gene amplification

  • The clinical utility of multigene profiling assays is currently established for an appropriate subset of patients with estrogen receptor–positive, her2-negative, node-negative breast cancer for whom a decision to give chemotherapy is difficult to make

  • Clinical evidence indicates that a high Oncotype dx recurrence score can predict for chemotherapy benefit, but a high Prosigna or EndoPredict score, prognostic, is not, based on clinical trial evidence, directly actionable

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Summary

Introduction

Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease, and risk of recurrence depends on several factors, including tumour size, histologic grade, regional lymph node involvement, lymphovascular invasion, and expression of both the estrogen (er) and progesterone hormone receptors, and on her[2] (human epidermal growth factor receptor 2) protein overexpression or gene amplification (or both). Since the early 2000s, multigene profiling assays, which use modern molecular quantitation technologies, have been developed to aid in the risk-stratification of early e403 breast cancers. The Molecular Oncology Advisory Committee (moac) at Cancer Care Ontario (cco) sought to systematically review the clinical utility of the regulatory-cleared assays that are commercially available in Canada. This clinical practice guideline was developed to determine the level of evidence supporting the clinical utility of commercially available multigene profiling assays and to provide guidance about whether certain breast cancer patient populations in Ontario would benefit from alternative tests in addition to Oncotype dx (Genomic Health, Redwood City, CA, U.S.A.)

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