Abstract

BackgroundNeoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) is used in patients with breast cancer to reduce tumor focus, metastatic risk, and patient mortality. Monitoring NAC effects is necessary to capture resistant patients and stop or change treatment. The existing methods for evaluating NAC results have some limitations. The aim of this study was to assess the tumor response at an early stage, after the first doses of the NAC, based on the variability of the backscattered ultrasound energy, and backscatter statistics. The backscatter statistics has not previously been used to monitor NAC effects.MethodsThe B-mode ultrasound images and raw radio frequency data from breast tumors were obtained using an ultrasound scanner before chemotherapy and 1 week after each NAC cycle. The study included twenty-four malignant breast cancers diagnosed in sixteen patients and qualified for neoadjuvant treatment before surgery. The shape parameter of the homodyned K distribution and integrated backscatter, along with the tumor size in the longest dimension, were determined based on ultrasound data and used as markers for NAC response. Cancer tumors were assigned to responding and non-responding groups, according to histopathological evaluation, which was a reference in assessing the utility of markers. Statistical analysis was performed to rate the ability of markers to predict the final NAC response based on data obtained after subsequent therapeutic doses.ResultsStatistically significant differences (p<0.05) between groups were obtained after 2, 3, 4, and 5 doses of NAC for quantitative ultrasound markers and after 5 doses for the assessment based on maximum tumor dimension. Statistical analysis showed that, after the second and third NAC courses the classification based on integrated backscatter marker was characterized by an AUC of 0.69 and 0.82, respectively. The introduction of the second quantitative marker describing the statistical properties of scattering increased the corresponding AUC values to 0.82 and 0.91.ConclusionsQuantitative ultrasound information can characterize the tumor's pathological response better and at an earlier stage of therapy than the assessment of the reduction of its dimensions. The introduction of statistical parameters of ultrasonic backscatter to monitor the effects of chemotherapy can increase the effectiveness of monitoring and contribute to a better personalization of NAC therapy.

Highlights

  • Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) was initially used in locally advanced breast cancer (LABC) and in the case of inflammatory cancer [1]

  • Significant differences (p

  • The introduction of statistical parameters of ultrasonic backscatter to monitor the effects of chemotherapy can increase the effectiveness of monitoring and contribute to a better personalization of NAC therapy

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Summary

Introduction

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) was initially used in locally advanced breast cancer (LABC) and in the case of inflammatory cancer [1] It is recommended in patients with triple-negative cancer (TNBC), with the presence of HER-2 + receptors (Luminal B HER2-positive and HER-positive non-luminal subtype), and in cases of luminal B HER2-negative tumors with low expression of hormone receptors, with high grade of malignancy (G3) in patients at an early age ( 35 years) in the second or third stage of cancer [2,3,4]. Even over 40% of patients undergoing chemotherapy show a poor pathological response to the treatment [6] In such cases, the whole cycle of neoadjuvant therapy, which lasts about 4 months (five cycles), is associated with the delayed start of another, more effective treatment and unnecessary exposure of the patient to the toxic effects of the drugs used. The backscatter statistics has not previously been used to monitor NAC effects

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