70-gene signature as an aid for treatment decisions in early breast cancer: updated results of the phase 3 randomised MINDACT trial with an exploratory analysis by age

The MINDACT trial showed excellent 5-year distant metastasis-free survival of 94·7% (95% CI 92·5–96·2) in patients with breast cancer of high clinical and low genomic risk who did not receive chemotherapy. We present long-term follow-up results together with an exploratory analysis by age. MINDACT w...

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Veröffentlicht in:The lancet oncology 2021-04, Vol.22 (4), p.476-488
Hauptverfasser: Piccart, Martine, van 't Veer, Laura J, Poncet, Coralie, Lopes Cardozo, Josephine M N, Delaloge, Suzette, Pierga, Jean-Yves, Vuylsteke, Peter, Brain, Etienne, Vrijaldenhoven, Suzan, Neijenhuis, Peter A, Causeret, Sylvian, Smilde, Tineke J, Viale, Giuseppe, Glas, Annuska M, Delorenzi, Mauro, Sotiriou, Christos, Rubio, Isabel T, Kümmel, Sherko, Zoppoli, Gabriele, Thompson, Alastair M, Matos, Erika, Zaman, Khalil, Hilbers, Florentine, Fumagalli, Debora, Ravdin, Peter, Knox, Susan, Tryfonidis, Konstantinos, Peric, Aleksandra, Meulemans, Bart, Bogaerts, Jan, Cardoso, Fatima, Rutgers, Emiel J T
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Zusammenfassung:The MINDACT trial showed excellent 5-year distant metastasis-free survival of 94·7% (95% CI 92·5–96·2) in patients with breast cancer of high clinical and low genomic risk who did not receive chemotherapy. We present long-term follow-up results together with an exploratory analysis by age. MINDACT was a multicentre, randomised, phase 3 trial done in 112 academic and community hospitals in nine European countries. Patients aged 18–70 years, with histologically confirmed primary invasive breast cancer (stage T1, T2, or operable T3) with up to three positive lymph nodes, no distant metastases, and a WHO performance status of 0–1 were enrolled and their genomic risk (using the MammaPrint 70-gene signature) and clinical risk (using a modified version of Adjuvant! Online) were determined. Patients with low clinical and low genomic risk results did not receive chemotherapy, and patients with high clinical and high genomic risk did receive chemotherapy (mostly anthracycline-based or taxane-based, or a combination thereof). Patients with discordant risk results (ie, patients with high clinical risk but low genomic risk, and those with low clinical risk but high genomic risk) were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive chemotherapy or not based on either the clinical risk or the genomic risk. Randomisation was done centrally and used a minimisation technique that was stratified by institution, risk group, and clinical–pathological characteristics. Treatment allocation was not masked. The primary endpoint was to test whether the distant metastasis-free survival rate at 5 years in patients with high clinical risk and low genomic risk not receiving chemotherapy had a lower boundary of the 95% CI above the predefined non-inferiority boundary of 92%. In the primary test population of patients with high clinical risk and low genomic risk who adhered to the treatment allocation of no chemotherapy and had no change in risk post-enrolment. Here, we present updated follow-up as well as an exploratory analysis of a potential age effect (≤50 years vs >50 years) and an analysis by nodal status for patients with hormone receptor-positive and HER2-negative disease. These analyses were done in the intention-to-treat population. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT00433589, and the European Clinical Trials database, EudraCT2005–002625–31. Recruitment is complete and further long-term follow-up is ongoing. Between Feb 8, 2007, and July 11, 2011, 6693 patients were enroll
ISSN:1470-2045
1474-5488
DOI:10.1016/S1470-2045(21)00007-3