Abstract

Seventy six consecutive patients with T2-4, N0-1, M0 primary breast cancer (BC) received a median of 3 cycles of CMF (cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, 5-fluorouracil) regimen. Tamoxifen was concomitantly administered in patients with estrogen receptor positive (ER+) BC. Ki67 antigen was evaluated immunohistochemically in tumor specimens obtained before chemotherapy and at mastectomy. At post chemotherapy evaluation, tumor shrinkage greater than 50% was obtained in 60 patients (78.9%), 21 of them being complete responders (27.6%). As a whole, primary chemotherapy significantly decreased the number of Ki67 positive cells. More than 50% decrease in Ki67 expression was observed in 78.9% of patients attaining a clinical complete response (CR), in 44.7% of patients with partial remission (PR) and in 50.0% of non-responders, while an increase (>25%) in Ki67 expression was found in 5.3%, 18.4% and 18.7% of patients with CR, PR and non-response, respectively. Both CR and PR rates were superimposable in patients with ER+ and ER- primary BC, while the reduction in Ki67 expression was mainly found in ER+ cases. Patients with increased Ki67 expression from baseline, at the end of primary chemotherapy, had a shorter disease-free interval (70 months) with respect to patients with no change (88+ months) or decrease (87+ months), p<0. 05. To conclude, the activity of CMF + tamoxifen in primary BC does not seem superior to that expected administering CMF alone. The reduction in Ki67 expression, as a whole, correlated with clinical CR, but some individual discrepancies between tumor shrinkage and Ki67 pattern have been observed. The Ki67 reduction mainly confined to the ER+ primary BC suggests that tumor response in this subset may be linked to the reduction in proliferation activity, whereas other mechanisms such as apoptosis might be responsible for the tumor shrinkage in ER- tumors. Since the increase in proliferation activity after primary chemotherapy was associated with a greater recurrence rate and lower disease free interval, irrespective of tumor response, changes in proliferation activity after primary chemotherapy may represent a potentially available parameter that, in addition to the tumor response, can discriminate patients who would benefit from the cytotoxic treatment from patients who would not.

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