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Authors |
Martin Sjöström S Laura Chang Nick Fishbane Elai Davicioni Shuang G Zhao Linda Hartman Erik Holmberg Felix Y Feng Corey W Speers Lori J Pierce Per Malmström Mårten Fernö Per Karlsson |
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Published in | Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology |
Volume | 37 |
Issue | 35 |
Pages | 3340-3349 |
ISSN | 1527-7755 |
Publication year | 2019 |
Published at |
Institute of Clinical Sciences, Department of Oncology |
Pages | 3340-3349 |
Language | en |
Links |
dx.doi.org/10.1200/JCO.19.00761 www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.f... |
Subject categories | Clinical Medicine, Cancer and Oncology |
Most patients with early-stage breast cancer are treated with adjuvant radiotherapy (RT) after breast-conserving surgery (BCS) to prevent locoregional recurrence (LRR). However, no genomic tools are used currently to select the optimal RT strategy.We profiled the transcriptome of primary tumors on a clinical grade assay from the SweBCG91-RT trial, in which patients with node-negative breast cancer were randomly assigned to either whole-breast RT after BCS or no RT. We derived a new classifier, Adjuvant Radiotherapy Intensification Classifier (ARTIC), comprising 27 genes and patient age, in three publicly available cohorts, then independently validated ARTIC for LRR in 748 patients in SweBCG91-RT. We also compared previously published genomic signatures for ability to predict benefit from RT in SweBCG91-RT.ARTIC was highly prognostic for LRR in patients treated with RT (hazard ratio [HR], 3.4; 95% CI, 2.0 to 5.9; P < .001) and predictive of RT benefit (Pinteraction = .005). Patients with low ARTIC scores had a large benefit from RT (HR, 0.33 [95% CI, 0.21 to 0.52], P < .001; 10-year cumulative incidence of LRR, 6% v 21%), whereas those with high ARTIC scores benefited less from RT (HR, 0.73 [95% CI, 0.44 to 1.2], P = .23; 10-year cumulative incidence of LRR, 25% v 32%). In contrast, none of the eight previously published signatures were predictive of benefit from RT in SweBCG91-RT.ARTIC identified women with a substantial benefit from RT as well as women with a particularly elevated LRR risk in whom whole-breast RT was not sufficiently effective and, thus, in whom intensified treatment strategies such as tumor-bed boost, and possibly regional nodal RT, should be considered. To our knowledge, ARTIC is the first classifier validated as predictive of benefit from RT in a phase III clinical trial with patients randomly assigned to receive or not receive RT.