Abstract

Many women with hormone receptor-positive early breast cancer can be managed effectively with endocrine therapies alone. However, additional systemic chemotherapy treatment is necessary for others. The clinical challenges in managing high-risk women are to identify existing and novel druggable targets, and to identify those who would benefit from these therapies. Therefore, we performed mRNA abundance analysis using the Tamoxifen and Exemestane Adjuvant Multinational (TEAM) trial pathology cohort to identify a signature of residual risk following endocrine therapy and pathways that are potentially druggable. A panel of genes compiled from academic and commercial multiparametric tests as well as genes of importance to breast cancer pathogenesis was used to profile 3825 patients. A signature of 95 genes, including nodal status, was validated to stratify endocrine-treated patients into high-risk and low-risk groups based on distant relapse-free survival (DRFS; Hazard Ratio = 5.05, 95% CI 3.53–7.22, p = 7.51 × 10−19). This risk signature was also found to perform better than current multiparametric tests. When the 95-gene prognostic signature was applied to all patients in the validation cohort, including patients who received adjuvant chemotherapy, the signature remained prognostic (HR = 4.76, 95% CI 3.61-6.28, p = 2.53× 10−28). Functional gene interaction analyses identified six significant modules representing pathways involved in cell cycle control, mitosis and receptor tyrosine signaling; containing a number of genes with existing targeted therapies for use in breast or other malignancies. Thus the identification of high-risk patients using this prognostic signature has the potential to also prioritize patients for treatment with these targeted therapies.

Highlights

  • Despite significant improvements in the treatment of early estrogen receptor positive (ER+) breast cancer, there are ongoing clinical challenges

  • Using the Tamoxifen and Exemestane Adjuvant Multinational trial (TEAM) pathology cohort,[19] comprised of 3825 hormonereceptor positive (ER+ and/or PgR+) cases and including 477 (13%) HER2-positive cases, we have discovered and validated a novel 95-gene signature of residual risk, which has the potential to markedly improved risk stratification in the context of endocrinetreated patients

  • Patients who were treated with adjuvant chemotherapy, the signature was modeled against all patients in the validation cohort and adjusted for adjuvant chemotherapy (n = 3035)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Despite significant improvements in the treatment of early estrogen receptor positive (ER+) breast cancer, there are ongoing clinical challenges. Using the Tamoxifen and Exemestane Adjuvant Multinational trial (TEAM) pathology cohort,[19] comprised of 3825 hormonereceptor positive (ER+ and/or PgR+) cases and including 477 (13%) HER2-positive cases, we have discovered and validated a novel 95-gene signature of residual risk, which has the potential to markedly improved risk stratification in the context of endocrinetreated patients. This gene signature has revealed potentially druggable targets, moving closer to the vision of stratification to targeted therapies for such high-risk patients

RESULTS
Validation Cohort
DISCUSSION
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