• N. Engl. J. Med. · Dec 2004

    Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial

    A multigene assay to predict recurrence of tamoxifen-treated, node-negative breast cancer.

    • Soonmyung Paik, Steven Shak, Gong Tang, Chungyeul Kim, Joffre Baker, Maureen Cronin, Frederick L Baehner, Michael G Walker, Drew Watson, Taesung Park, William Hiller, Edwin R Fisher, D Lawrence Wickerham, John Bryant, and Norman Wolmark.
    • Division of Pathology, Operation Center, and the Biostatistics Center, National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project, Pittsburgh 15212, USA. spaik.nejm@nsabp.org <spaik.nejm@nsabp.org>
    • N. Engl. J. Med. 2004 Dec 30; 351 (27): 281728262817-26.

    BackgroundThe likelihood of distant recurrence in patients with breast cancer who have no involved lymph nodes and estrogen-receptor-positive tumors is poorly defined by clinical and histopathological measures.MethodsWe tested whether the results of a reverse-transcriptase-polymerase-chain-reaction (RT-PCR) assay of 21 prospectively selected genes in paraffin-embedded tumor tissue would correlate with the likelihood of distant recurrence in patients with node-negative, tamoxifen-treated breast cancer who were enrolled in the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project clinical trial B-14. The levels of expression of 16 cancer-related genes and 5 reference genes were used in a prospectively defined algorithm to calculate a recurrence score and to determine a risk group (low, intermediate, or high) for each patient.ResultsAdequate RT-PCR profiles were obtained in 668 of 675 tumor blocks. The proportions of patients categorized as having a low, intermediate, or high risk by the RT-PCR assay were 51, 22, and 27 percent, respectively. The Kaplan-Meier estimates of the rates of distant recurrence at 10 years in the low-risk, intermediate-risk, and high-risk groups were 6.8 percent (95 percent confidence interval, 4.0 to 9.6), 14.3 percent (95 percent confidence interval, 8.3 to 20.3), and 30.5 percent (95 percent confidence interval, 23.6 to 37.4). The rate in the low-risk group was significantly lower than that in the high-risk group (P<0.001). In a multivariate Cox model, the recurrence score provided significant predictive power that was independent of age and tumor size (P<0.001). The recurrence score was also predictive of overall survival (P<0.001) and could be used as a continuous function to predict distant recurrence in individual patients.ConclusionsThe recurrence score has been validated as quantifying the likelihood of distant recurrence in tamoxifen-treated patients with node-negative, estrogen-receptor-positive breast cancer.Copyright 2004 Massachusetts Medical Society.

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