Metzger Filho Otto, Ballman Karla, Campbell Jordan, Liu Minetta, Ligibel Jennifer, Watson Mark, Chen Eveline, Du Lili, Stover Daniel, Carey Lisa, Partridge Ann, Kirshner Jeffrey, Muss Hyman, Hudis Clifford, Winer Eric P, Norton Larry, Symmans W Fraser
Dana-Farber/Partners CancerCare, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Alliance Statistics and Data Management Center, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY.
J Clin Oncol. 2025 Apr;43(10):1229-1239. doi: 10.1200/JCO-24-01875. Epub 2025 Jan 2.
In light of evolving evidence that some patients with node-positive estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) disease may receive less benefit from chemotherapy, this study reports 12-year outcomes of the C9741 trial overall, and by the sensitivity to endocrine therapy (SET2,3) test index, a biomarker measuring endocrine transcriptional activity, to identify patients most likely to benefit from dose-dense chemotherapy.
In all, 1,973 patients were randomly assigned to dose-dense versus conventional chemotherapy. Hazard ratios (HRs) for prognosis and for predictive interaction with chemotherapy schedule were estimated from Cox models of long-term disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS). SET2,3 was tested on the 682 banked RNA samples from ER+ cancers.
Dose-dense chemotherapy improved DFS in the overall study population by 23% (HR, 0.77 [95% CI, 0.66 to 0.90]) and OS by 20% (HR, 0.80 [95% CI, 0.67 to 0.95]); the benefits of dose-dense therapy were seen for ER+ and ER-negative subsets, without significant interaction between treatment arm and ER status. Low SET2,3 status was highly prognostic, but also predicted improved outcomes from dose-dense chemotherapy (interaction = .0998 for DFS; 0.027 for OS), independent of menopausal status. Specifically, low endocrine transcriptional activity predicted benefit from dose-dense chemotherapy, whereas tumor burden and proliferation-driven signatures for molecular subtype classification did not.
At 12-year follow-up, C9741 confirmed the sustained long-term benefit of adjuvant dose-dense chemotherapy for node-positive breast cancer. SET2,3 identified patients with ER+ breast cancer who benefited from dose-dense chemotherapy, and specifically, this benefit was predicted by low endocrine activity in the cancer, rather than tumor burden, molecular subtype, or menopausal status.
鉴于越来越多的证据表明,一些淋巴结阳性、雌激素受体阳性(ER+)疾病患者可能从化疗中获益较少,本研究报告了C9741试验的12年总体结果,并通过内分泌治疗敏感性(SET2,3)测试指数(一种测量内分泌转录活性的生物标志物)来识别最有可能从剂量密集化疗中获益的患者。
总共1973例患者被随机分配接受剂量密集化疗与传统化疗。从长期无病生存(DFS)和总生存(OS)的Cox模型中估计预后以及与化疗方案预测性相互作用的风险比(HR)。对来自ER+癌症的682份保存的RNA样本进行SET2,3检测。
在整个研究人群中,剂量密集化疗使DFS提高了23%(HR,0.77 [95% CI,0.66至0.90]),使OS提高了20%(HR,0.80 [95% CI,0.67至0.95]);在ER+和ER阴性亚组中均观察到剂量密集治疗的益处,治疗组与ER状态之间无显著相互作用。低SET2,3状态具有高度预后价值,但也预示着剂量密集化疗能带来更好的结局(DFS的相互作用P = 0.0998;OS的相互作用P = 0.027),与绝经状态无关。具体而言,低内分泌转录活性预示着能从剂量密集化疗中获益,而用于分子亚型分类的肿瘤负荷和增殖驱动特征则不能。
在12年的随访中,C9741证实了辅助剂量密集化疗对淋巴结阳性乳腺癌具有持续的长期益处。SET2,3识别出了从剂量密集化疗中获益的ER+乳腺癌患者,具体而言,这种益处是由癌症中的低内分泌活性预测的,而非肿瘤负荷、分子亚型或绝经状态。