Abstract

The Breast Cancer Disease Site Group of Cancer Care Ontario identified the need for new guidelines for the adjuvant systemic therapy of early-stage breast cancer. The specific question to be addressed was "What is the optimal adjuvant systemic therapy for female patients with early-stage operable breast cancer, when patient and disease factors are considered?" A systematic review was prepared based on literature searches conducted using the medline and embase databases for the period January 2008 to March 5, 2012, and updated to May 12, 2014. Guidelines were located from that search, from the Standards and Guidelines Evidence directory of cancer guidelines, and from the Web sites of major guideline organizations. The literature located was subdivided into the broad categories of chemotherapy, hormonal therapy, and therapy targeted to her2 (human epidermal growth factor receptor 2). Although several of the systemic therapies discussed in this guideline can be considered in the neoadjuvant setting, the review focused on trials with rates of disease-free and overall survival as endpoints and thus excluded several trials that used pathologic complete response as a primary endpoint. Based on the systematic review, the working group drafted recommendations on the use of chemotherapy, hormonal therapy, and targeted therapy; based on their professional experience, they also drafted recommendations on patient and disease characteristics and recurrence risk. The literature review and draft recommendations were circulated to a consensus panel of medical oncologists who had expertise in breast cancer and who represented the regions of Ontario. Items without initial consensus were discussed at an in-person consensus meeting held in Toronto, November 23, 2012. The final recommendations are those for which consensus was reached before or at the meeting. Some of the key evidence was revised after the updated literature search. Evidence reviews for systemic chemotherapy, endocrine therapy, and targeted therapy for her2-positive disease are reported in separate articles in this supplement. The full three-part 1-21 evidence-based series, including complete details of the development and consensus processes, can be found on the Cancer Care Ontario Web site at https://www.cancercare.on.ca/toolbox/qualityguidelines/diseasesite/breast-ebs.

Highlights

  • The survival of women diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer in Canada has improved significantly since the early 1980s

  • The pebc Breast Cancer Disease Site Group has produced multiple guidance documents for individual drugs used in systemic adjuvant therapy; those documents are available at the cco Web site

  • The consensus panel agreed the test is useful in selecting patients either with hormone receptor–positive, her2negative, lymph node–negative cancer or with lymph node micrometastasis in whom the additional benefit of chemotherapy compared with endocrine therapy alone is unclear

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The survival of women diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer in Canada has improved significantly since the early 1980s. The pebc Breast Cancer Disease Site Group has produced multiple guidance documents for individual drugs used in systemic adjuvant therapy; those documents are available at the cco Web site (https://www.cancercare.on.ca/toolbox/ qualityguidelines/). S67 Current Oncology—Volume 22, Supplement 1, March 2015 therapeutic advances warranted the development, from an Ontario perspective, of updated, comprehensive recommendations for systemic therapy in early-stage breast cancer. The target population for the present guideline is female patients who are being considered for, or who are receiving, systemic therapy for early-stage invasive breast cancer (see the Methods section). The intended users of this guideline are oncology practitioners, typically medical oncologists in Ontario who prescribe adjuvant systemic therapy to women with early-stage breast cancer. The stakeholders who constituted the consensus panel and who participated in the guideline development process included medical oncologists who treat breast cancer across the province. Medical oncologists from hospitals not affiliated with a cancer centre, who were known provincially to have an interest in breast cancer, were asked to participate

Systematic Review
Development of Recommendations
Internal and External Review Process
RESULTS
RECOMMENDATIONS AND KEY EVIDENCE
Patient and Disease Characteristics and Recurrence Risk
Selection of Optimal Adjuvant Chemotherapy Regimens
Adjuvant Endocrine Therapy
IMPLEMENTATION
REVIEW AND UPDATE
CONFLICT OF INTEREST DISCLOSURES
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