Abstract

Endocrine treatment for breast cancer acts largely by inhibiting tumor cell proliferation. The study aimed to explore the fall in proliferative marker Ki67 in patients receiving preoperative endocrine therapy and the factors associated with it. A prospective series of hormone receptor-positive postmenopausal women with early N0/N1 breast cancer were enrolled. Patients were requested to take letrozole OD while they await surgery. The fall in Ki67 after the endocrine therapy was defined as the percentage of the difference between the pre-and postoperative Ki67 value with the preoperative Ki67. Sixty cases matched the criteria of which 41 (68.3%) of women showed a good response to preoperative letrozole (fall in Ki67 > 50%; p-value < 0.001). The average mean fall in Ki67 was 57.083 ± 37.97. Postoperative Ki67 after the therapy was less than 10% in 39 (65%) patients. Ten patients (16.6%) had a low Ki67 index at baseline, which continued to remain low after preoperative endocrine therapy. The duration of the therapy did not affect the percentage of Ki67 fall in our study. Short-term changes in the Ki67 index in the neoadjuvant settings may predict outcomes during adjuvant use of the same treatment. Proliferation index on residual tumor holds prognostic importance, and our results reflect that greater attention should be given to the percentage of reduction of Ki67, rather than focusing purely on a fixed value. This could help predict patients who respond well to endocrine therapy, while those who respond poorly may require further adjuvant treatment.

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