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Clinical Overview |
Cancer Center, Aultman Health Foundation, Canton, Ohio
REPRINT REQUESTS: Eleftherios P. Mamounas, MD, Cancer Center, Aultman Health Foundation, 2600 6th Street, Canton, OH 44710, Telephone: 330-438-6281, FAX: 330-363-7367, Email: tmamounas{at}aultman.com
Received: January 28, 2003.
Accepted: September 10, 2003.
| Abstract |
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Key Words: Breast cancer Early stage, clinical trials NSABP Chemotherapy adjuvant Biological therapy Mastectomy segmental
| INTRODUCTION |
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The rationale, design and updated results from these pivotal and more recent trials will be reviewed in this manuscript. Finally, current and future research directions of the NSABP in the context of other developments in surgical and adjuvant breast cancer therapy will also be discussed.
| PIVOTAL LOCO-REGIONAL THERAPY TRIALS FOR INVASIVE AND INTRADUCTAL CARCINOMA |
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After 25 years of follow-up, the B-04 trial continues to demonstrate no significant differences in long-term outcome between clinically negative-node patients who received radical mastectomy and those who received total mastectomy with or without nodal radiation, or between clinically positive-node patients who received radical mastectomy and those who received total mastectomy with nodal radiation.6 Among women with clinically negative nodes, the hazard ratio for death among those who were treated with total mastectomy and radiation as compared with those who underwent radical mastectomy was 1.08 (95% confidence interval, 0.91 to 1.28; P=0.38). The hazard ratio for death among those who had total mastectomy without radiation as compared with those who underwent radical mastectomy was 1.03 (95% confidence interval, 0.87 to 1.23; P=0.72). Among women with positive nodes, the hazard ratio for death among those who underwent total mastectomy and radiation as compared with those who underwent radical mastectomy was 1.06 (95% confidence interval, 0.89 to 1.27; P=0.49).
These findings validate earlier results showing no advantage from radical mastectomy.1 Although differences in outcome of a few percentage points cannot be excluded, these findings fail to confer a significant survival advantage from removing occult positive nodes at the time of initial surgery or from the addition of loco-regional radiation to total mastectomy. Perhaps more importantly, the initial results of the B-04 trial helped pave the way for the conduct of the NSABP B-06 trial designed to evaluate even less radical surgical procedures for the treatment of early-stage breast cancer.
The NSABP B-06 trial compared lumpectomy and axillary node dissection with or without breast radiation with modified radical mastectomy in patients with tumors 4 cm or less in their greatest diameter. Similar to prior reports,2,7 the last update from that trial continues to demonstrate the value of lumpectomy and breast radiation as the preferred treatment in the majority of patients with invasive operable breast cancer. After 20 years of follow-up,8 there continue to be no significant differences in overall survival (OS), disease free survival (DFS), or distant DFS between the group of patients who underwent total mastectomy and the group treated with lumpectomy alone, or with lumpectomy and breast radiation. The hazard ratio for death among the women who underwent lumpectomy alone, as compared with those who underwent total mastectomy, was 1.05 (95% confidence interval, 0.90 to 1.23; P=0.51). The hazard ratio for death among the women who underwent lumpectomy and breast radiation, as compared with those who underwent total mastectomy, was 0.97 (95% confidence interval, 0.83 to 1.14; P=0.74). Among the lumpectomy-treated women whose surgical specimens had tumor-free margins, the hazard ratio for death among the women who underwent postoperative breast irradiation, as compared with those who did not, was 0.91 (95% confidence interval, 0.77 to 1.06; P=0.23). Radiation therapy was associated with a marginally significant decrease in deaths due to breast cancer. However, this decrease was partially offset by an increase in deaths from other causes. The cumulative incidence of recurrent tumor in the ipsilateral breast was 14.3% in the women who underwent lumpectomy and breast radiation, as compared with 39.2% in the women who underwent lumpectomy alone (P<0.001).
The NSABP B-06 trial, along with other trials conducted by the Milan group to evaluate quadrantectomy,4,5 was instrumental in the establishment of breast conserving surgery plus radiotherapy as the preferred method of local treatment for patients with operable breast cancer.
Effect of radiotherapy and tamoxifen in patients with tumors <1 cm
One of the unresolved questions following disclosure of the results from the NSABP B-06 trial, as well as the Milan trial, was whether all patients with invasive breast cancer undergoing lumpectomy needed postoperative radiotherapy. It was hypothesized that patients with small tumors (
1 cm) could potentially be spared from radiotherapy because they have lower rates of local recurrence. It was further argued at that time (1990 Consensus Development Conference), that patients with negative nodes and tumors
1 cm may not even need adjuvant systemic therapy because of their good prognosis. Since the B-06 trial (as well as the B-14 trial, described later in this paper) did not include a sufficient number of patients with tumors
1 cm, the NSABP designed protocol B-21 to adequately address the radiotherapy and the tamoxifen questions in a randomized prospective trial (figure 1
).
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1 cm in diameter treated with lumpectomy and axillary dissection were randomized to tamoxifen alone, breast radiation plus tamoxifen for 5 years or radiation plus placebo for 5 years. A total of 1,009 patients were randomized (tamoxifen: n=336; radiation and placebo: n=336; radiation and tamoxifen: n=337). Recently published results demonstrated that radiation and placebo resulted in a 49% lower hazard rate of IBTR than did tamoxifen alone; radiation and tamoxifen resulted in a 63% lower rate of IBTR than did radiation and placebo.9 When compared with tamoxifen alone and radiation and tamoxifen resulted in an 81% reduction in hazard rate of IBTR.
The cumulative incidence of IBTR over an 8 year period was 16.5% with tamoxifen alone, 9.3% with radiation and placebo, and 2.8% with radiation and tamoxifen (figure 1
). Radiation reduced IBTR below the level achieved with tamoxifen alone, regardless of estrogen receptor status. Distant treatment failures were infrequent and not significantly different among the three groups (P=.28). When tamoxifen-treated women were compared with those who received radiation and placebo, there was a significant reduction in contralateral breast cancer (hazard ratio, 0.45; P=.039). Survival in the three groups was 93%, 94% and 93%, respectively (P=.93).
Thus, this trial demonstrated that in the group of node-negative patients with small invasive tumors treated by lumpectomy, tamoxifen was not as effective as breast radiation in controlling the disease in the breast. It further demonstrated that the combination of tamoxifen and breast radiation resulted in better local control of the disease in the breast than either modality alone.
Trial evaluating sentinel node biopsy in patients with invasive, operable breast cancer (NSABP B-32 trial)
Despite several decades of clinical investigations focusing on the prognostic factors for recurrence in patients with operable breast cancer, the status of the axillary lymph nodes has remained the single most important independent factor predicting outcome. Even with the development of several innovative non-invasive, radionuclide imaging modalities (such as Positron Emission Tomography (PET) scan and sestamibi scan), none so far has been shown to be as accurate as pathologic examination of the axillary nodes in predicting nodal status. Thus, surgical excision of the axillary nodes still represents the gold standard for staging the axilla.
Initial randomized trials evaluating less radical procedures for the surgical treatment of operable breast cancer have demonstrated that elective axillary dissection did not affect survival when compared to delayed axillary dissection (if and when the axillary lymph nodes became clinically palpable).1,6 Thus, for several years it has been accepted that elective axillary dissection is mainly performed for staging purposes, to aid in the selection of appropriate adjuvant therapy and for local control of the disease in the axilla. Recent randomized trials however, have demonstrated a small but statistically significant survival advantage by adding loco-regional radiation post-mastectomy in patients with positive axillary nodes who receive adjuvant chemotherapy.10,11
As an alternative to radiotherapy, axillary dissection provides excellent local control of the disease in the axilla in patients with positive axillary nodes. Whether axillary dissection is performed merely for staging purposes or whether it has a small therapeutic benefit in patients with positive nodes, in the majority of patients with operable breast cancer (about 75%) the axillary nodes are found to be histologically negative at the time of surgery. These patients do not derive any therapeutic benefit from the axillary dissection but could experience significant morbidity as a result of the procedure.
The desire to avoid an axillary dissection in these node-negative patients without losing the prognostic information derived from knowledge of the nodal status, has led to the development of lymphatic mapping and sentinel node biopsy. This procedure is currently performed widely in many centers and several non-randomized clinical studies have demonstrated its utility in patients with operable breast cancer (high sentinel node identification rate and low false-negative rate).1218 However, until randomized clinical trials demonstrate an equivalence between sentinel node biopsy and standard axillary dissection in terms of DFS, OS and local control of the disease in the axilla, axillary dissection remains the standard of care.
As a result, after a series of adjuvant therapy trials, the NSABP returned to its surgical roots and is currently about to complete accrual for a large randomized trial to evaluate sentinel node biopsy in patients with operable breast cancer. The NSABP B-32 trial randomizes patients with clinically negative axillary nodes to sentinel node biopsy alone or sentinel node biopsy followed by axillary dissection (figure 2
). Patients in the sentinel node biopsy alone group who are found to have positive sentinel node also undergo full axillary dissection.
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Pivotal NSABP trials in patients with ductal carcinoma in situ
As randomized trials demonstrated the value of breast conserving surgery in patients with invasive breast cancer, an obvious question arose relative to the value of this procedure in patients with non-invasive disease. The introduction and widespread use of mammography has contributed to a dramatic increase in the incidence of small, localized, non-palpable ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), an entity with excellent prognosis after local therapy alone.
Based on the results of the B-06 and other trials, in the early 1980s there was a paradox in the surgical treatment of early-stage breast cancer with invasive disease being treated progressively more with lumpectomy, whereas mastectomy remained the recommended surgical treatment for non-invasive disease. Thus, it became imperative at the time to test the value of breast conservation in patients with DCIS. The NSABP was the first group to conduct such a prospective randomized trial.
The NSABP B-17 trial compared lumpectomy alone to lumpectomy plus radiation in patients with localized DCIS (figure 3
). A mastectomy control group was not included, given the acceptance of lumpectomy based upon the results of the B-06 trial, as well as the excellent prognosis of patients with localized DCIS.
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In a subset of 623 out of 814 evaluable patients from this trial, pathologic features were analyzed relative to their prognostic significance for ipsilateral breast cancer recurrence.21 Only the presence of moderate/marked comedo necrosis was a statistically significant independent predictor of risk for ipsilateral breast cancer recurrence in both treatment groups. Radiation markedly reduced the annual hazard rates for ipsilateral breast cancer recurrence in all subgroups of patients.
Following completion of the B-17 trial, another randomized trial was conducted by the NSABP in patients with DCIS to evaluate the role of tamoxifen following lumpectomy and radiation (NSABP B-24, figure 4
). At that time, a large body of scientific evidence had accumulated demonstrating benefit from tamoxifen administration in patients with resected early-stage invasive breast cancer.22 In these patients, tamoxifen not only reduced the risk for systemic recurrence but also had a significant impact in reducing the rate of IBTR following lumpectomy and radiation.23,24 More importantly, tamoxifen was found to reduce the incidence of second primary breast cancers in the contralateral breast by about 40%.2228 The latter observation, along with preclinical evidence that tamoxifen inhibits both the initiation and promotion of tumors in experimental animals,29,30 made tamoxifen an attractive agent for patients with DCIS treated with lumpectomy and radiation by possibly reducing the rate of development of ipsilateral and contralateral invasive breast cancers.
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Updated results after 7 years of follow-up continue to demonstrate,31 that the addition of tamoxifen significantly improved DFS from 77.1% to 83.0% (P=0.002). This improvement was mainly the result of a reduction in the incidence of invasive and non-invasive breast cancer events in the ipsilateral as well as in the contralateral breast. The cumulative incidence of all ipsilateral and contralateral breast cancer events was reduced by 39% to 16.0% in the placebo group to 10.0% in the tamoxifen group (P=0.0003).19 When the rate of all invasive breast cancer events was evaluated, tamoxifen resulted in a 45% reduction (P=0.0009). When the rate of non-invasive breast cancer events was evaluated, the addition of tamoxifen resulted in a 27% non-significant reduction (P=0.11). When the effect of tamoxifen was examined relative to the location of the first event, the cumulative incidence of ipsilateral breast cancers was reduced by 31% (11.1% with tamoxifen vs. 7.7% with placebo, P=0.02) and the cumulative incidence of contra-lateral breast cancers was reduced by 47% (4.9% vs. 2.3%, P=0.01) (figure 4
).
Several patient and tumor characteristics were found to increase the rate of ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence, such as age under 50, involved/unknown lumpectomy margins, presence of comedo necrosis and DCIS presentation with clinical findings. The effect of tamoxifen in reducing ipsilateral breast cancer was evident irrespective of age, margin status, or presence/absence of comedo necrosis. However, for women with clinically apparent DCIS at study entry, IBTR rates were similar between the tamoxifen and placebo groups even though the number of patients in that category was small.
Results from the B-24 trial indicate a significant benefit from tamoxifen in patients with DCIS. When these results are viewed together with those demonstrating benefit from tamoxifen in women with prior invasive breast cancer,2228 and in women with atypical hyperplasia and lobular carcinoma in situ,32 they support the use of tamoxifen in the entire spectrum of breast neoplasia. However, one outstanding question following disclosure of the B-24 results was whether the observed benefit from tamoxifen was limited to subsets of DCIS patients. Given the strong association between estrogen receptor expression and tamoxifen benefit in patients with invasive breast cancer, presence of a similar association might also be expected in patients with DCIS.
At the 2002 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium, Allred et al. presented data from the NSABP B-24 trial assessing the tamoxifen benefit according to the estrogen receptor status of the primary DCIS tumor.33 Out of the 1804 patients participating in the trial, information on the status of estrogen receptor was available in 628 patients (327 placebo, 301 tamoxifen). Seventy-seven percent of patients had estrogen receptors (ER)-positive tumors. In these patients, the effectiveness of tamoxifen was clear [relative risk (RR) for all breast cancer events: 0.41, P=0.0002]. Significant reductions in breast cancer events were seen in both the ipsilateral and the contralateral breast. In patients with ER-negative tumors, little benefit was observed (RR for all breast cancer events: 0.80, P=0.51), but the total number of events in this cohort was too small to rule out a small, clinically meaningful benefit. However, when these results are taken together with those evaluating the effect of tamoxifen in patients with invasive breast cancer and negative estrogen receptors, they are consistent with the observation that tamoxifen has no appreciable benefit in reducing rates of recurrence or rates of contralateral breast cancer in patients with ER-negative tumors. Furthermore, these results suggest that routine assessment of estrogen receptor status should now also be performed in patients with DCIS to determine their candidacy for tamoxifen therapy.
In the 1990s significant enthusiasm developed with the demonstration of considerable activity and favorable toxicity profile with third-generation aromatase inhibitors in patients with hormone-responsive advanced breast cancer.3440 As a result, several clinical trials have evaluated or are currently evaluating aromatase inhibitors as adjuvant therapy in patients with early-stage breast cancer.
The first trial to report results in this setting was the Anastrozole Tamoxifen Against Combination (ATAC) trial.41 This trial compared 5 years of adjuvant tamoxifen with 5 years of adjuvant anastrozole and 5 years of the combination of anastrozole plus tamoxifen in patients with stage III breast cancer. It demonstrated significant DFS superiority for anastrozole when compared to tamoxifen.
An important finding in this trial was the observation that the incidence of contralateral breast cancer was significantly decreased in patients treated with anastrozole compared to those treated with tamoxifen (odds ratio 0.42, P=0.007). The majority of the contralateral breast cancers were invasive (83%), and when the analysis was restricted to these events, the difference between the treatment groups was somewhat larger (odds ratio 0.30, P=0.001).
This observation has major implications relative to the potential use of aromatase inhibitors for patients with DCIS and for those at high-risk for developing invasive breast cancer. This rationale was further strengthened by the favorable side-effect profile of anastrozole when compared to tamoxifen. When compared to tamoxifen, anastrozole-treated patients experienced a reduction in endometrial cancer, vaginal bleeding and discharge, cerebro-vascular events, venous thromboembolic events and hot flushes. On the other hand, when compared to tamoxifen, anastrozole resulted in significantly more myoskeletal disorders and fractures, which may have significant implications for the long-term use of this drug in patients with DCIS and in the chemoprevention setting.
Based upon the above results, the NSABP recently initiated a new clinical trial in patients with DCIS (NSABP B-35). In this trial, patients with localized ER- or progesterone-receptor (PR)-positive DCIS, after undergoing a lumpectomy with negative margins, are randomized to radiotherapy and tamoxifen for five years or to radiotherapy and anastrozole for five years (figure 5
). The primary aim of the study is to evaluate the effectiveness of anastrozole compared to tamoxifen in preventing the subsequent occurrence of breast cancer (local, regional, and distant recurrences, and contra-lateral breast cancer). In addition, the trial will ascertain the effects of anastrozole on patient symptoms and quality of life as compared to tamoxifen.
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| ADJUVANT THERAPY TRIALS IN PATIENTS WITH NEGATIVE NODES |
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Studies in patients with ER-negative tumors
The first trial (NSABP B-13) randomized patients with negative nodes and negative estrogen receptors to surgery alone, or surgery followed by 12 months of adjuvant chemotherapy with methotrexate and sequentially administered 5-FU [methotrexate and fluorouracil (MF)] followed by leucovorin (figure 6
). Findings over the course of 14 years of follow-up42 demonstrate that the improvements from MF in DFS and OS, previously reported after five43 and eight44 years, have persisted (P<0.0001 in the former and P=0.02 in the latter, figure 6
). A statistically significant benefit in DFS was evident both for women <50 years of age (P=0.005) as well as those
50 years (P=0.001). A statistically significant benefit in terms of survival was evident only in women
50 years of age (P=0.02). For women <50 years of age, there was a non-significant trend towards improvement in OS with MF (P=0.3). However, there was no statistically significant evidence of an interaction between treatment group and age relative to OS (P=0.34).
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50 years, there was a small but non-significant advantage in both DFS (P=0.2) and OS (P=0.8). As was also observed in the B-13 trial, there was no evidence of a statistically significant interaction between treatment and age group relative to DFS (P=0.22) and OS (P=0.08).
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Results from several preclinical studies demonstrated that tamoxifen acts not only through a blockade of the estrogen receptor pathway but also by modulating production of growth factors such as TGF-
and TGF-ß, by increasing the levels of sex hormone binding globulin in the serum, by increasing natural killer cell counts and by decreasing insulin-like growth factor. In addition, at the time of initiation of this study there was considerable clinical information suggesting that tamoxifen prolongs DFS and OS irrespective of receptor status although the benefit in ER-negative tumors was of less magnitude.4548 Since that time, an increasing body of evidence has demonstrated that tamoxifen confers no significant advantage in patients with ER-negative tumors. The results of the B-23 trial confirmed these observations and demonstrated no significant prolongation in DFS or OS with the addition of tamoxifen to chemotherapy (DFS: CMF: 83%, CMF + tamoxifen: 83%, AC: 83%, AC + tamoxifen: 82%; OS CMF: 89%, CMF + tamoxifen: 89%, AC: 90%, AC + tamoxifen: 91%).49 The results of the B-23 trial also confirmed (in the node-negative setting) the previous observation from the NSABP B-15 trial (in node-positive patients) that 4 cycles of AC were equivalent to six cycles of CMF in terms of DFS and OS prolongation.
One interesting observation in this trial was that tamoxifen did not confer a significant reduction in the incidence of contralateral breast cancer as it has been shown in patients with ER-positive tumors and negative nodes.23,42 Explanation for this discrepancy was recently provided by a retrospective review of several NSABP trials, which found that there was significant concordance between the ER-status of the primary breast cancer and that of contralateral breast cancer.50 Thus, in about 80% of patients who initially present with an ER-negative primary and who develop contralateral breast cancer, the contralateral breast tumor is also ER-negative making the potential chemopreventive effect of tamoxifen negligible.
Studies in patients with ER-positive tumors
In parallel to the studies evaluating chemotherapy and tamoxifen in patients with node-negative, ER-negative breast cancer, the NSABP launched a series of trials evaluating tamoxifen and the combination of tamoxifen plus chemotherapy in patients with node-negative, ER-positive disease.
The NSABP B-14 trial randomized patients after surgery to 5 years of tamoxifen or 5 years of placebo (figure 8
). Published results from this trial over 10 years of follow-up24 continue to demonstrate a statistically significant DFS benefit from tamoxifen (69% vs. 57%, P<0.0001). In addition, a significant survival advantage was demonstrated in this update (80% vs. 76%; P=0.02). The DFS and OS advantage with tamoxifen was evident both in women <50 years of age as well as in those
50 years of age. Tamoxifen therapy continued to demonstrate a significant reduction in the rate of contralateral breast cancer (4.0% vs. 5.8%, P=0.007). The significant DFS and OS advantage with tamoxifen has now persisted through 14 years of follow-up (figure 8
).42
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Results reported through 4 years from re-randomization, demonstrated a significant disadvantage in DFS (86% vs. 92%, P=0.003) and distant DFS (90% vs. 96%, P=0.01) for patients who continued tamoxifen for more than 5 years versus those who discontinued the drug at 5 years. OS was 96% for those who discontinued tamoxifen compared with 94% for those who continued (P=0.08). Results, through 7 years from the time of re-randomization, continue to demonstrate no additional benefit from the prolonged tamoxifen administration.51 In fact, a slight advantage continues to exist for patients who discontinued tamoxifen after 5 years relative to those who continued to receive it (DFS:82% vs. 78%, P=0.03; relapse-free survival: 94% vs. 92%, P=0.13; OS: 94% vs. 91%, P=0.07, respectively). The lack of benefit from additional tamoxifen therapy was independent of age or other characteristics.
Since, based on the above information, adjuvant tamoxifen is optimally given for a period of about 5 years, the majority of patients are disease-free at the time they discontinue tamoxifen. Some of these seemingly disease-free patients, however, harbor residual or micrometastatic tumor cells even after several years of tamoxifen therapy. In a proportion of these patients, the residual or micrometastatic tumor cells may still be responsive to tamoxifen. The clinical data, however, support the notion that in a greater proportion of patients these tumor cells would potentially be stimulated by tamoxifen if the drug was continued for a longer period of time. Thus, although discontinuing tamoxifen may benefit the latter group, it would be detrimental to the former group of patients.
In both groups the tumor cells are hormonally sensitive. Therefore, reducing the level of estrogenic stimulation at the time of tamoxifen discontinuation appears to be a reasonable strategy to further reduce the probability of recurrence. No information exists on whether additional hormonal interventions after discontinuation of tamoxifen therapy would prove of benefit in breast cancer patients who are recurrence-free at the time. However, abundant information is available, demonstrating that substantial antitumor responses in a proportion of recurring patients during or after tamoxifen therapy with sequential administration of aromatase inhibitors.3438 The downside of the "wait and treat upon recurrence" approach is that at the time of recurrence an additional proportion of tumors may already have become hormone resistant and another proportion would remain hormone sensitive only for a short time.
Thus, attempting to further reduce the risk of subsequent recurrence in patients who remain disease-free after completion of adjuvant tamoxifen therapy has theoretical advantages. Moreover, studies have shown that 10% to 20% of patients who are recurrence-free at 5 years (usual time of tamoxifen discontinuation), would suffer an event during the following 5 years if left untreated.
Based on the above rationale, the NSABP developed protocol B-33, a randomized trial comparing exemestane with placebo in postmenopausal patients who complete 5 years of tamoxifen and are recurrence-free (figure 9
). Exemestane is a potent, orally active, selective, long-lasting irreversible steroidal inhibitor of aromatase. Phase I/II studies in patients with advanced breast cancer, it has demonstrated significant antitumor activity and favorable toxicity profile.5255 More importantly, in a phase III study, as second line treatment in patients with advanced breast cancer, exemestane was equivalent to Megace in objective response, but was significantly superior to Megace in duration of overall success, time to progression, time to treatment failure and OS.38
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An important observation from the B-14 trial was that through 10 years of follow-up of tamoxifen-treated patients with ER positive, node-negative breast cancer, the DFS (69%) and OS (80%) were not as good as originally thought for this group of patients generally considered to have favorable prognosis.24 These numbers further decreased after 14 years of follow-up,42 with DFS being around 60% and OS around 75%. Although a small proportion of events included in the DFS and OS analyses are non-breast cancer related, these results under-score the need for further improvement in this group of patients.
Subsequent to the B-14 trial, the NSABP conducted protocol B-20 that evaluated the worth of adding chemotherapy to tamoxifen in patients with negative nodes and positive estrogen receptors (figure 10
). Between 1988 and 1993, 2,363 patients were randomized to receive either tamoxifen for 5 years, tamoxifen plus six cycles of sequential methotrexate and 5-fluorouracil followed by leucovorin (MFT) or tamoxifen plus 6 cycles of cyclophosphamide, methotrexate and 5-fluorouracil (CMFT). Through 5 years of follow-up, the combination of chemotherapy plus tamoxifen resulted in significantly better DFS survival than tamoxifen alone (90% for MFT versus 85% for tamoxifen, P=0.01; 89% for CMFT versus 85% for tamoxifen, P=0.001). A similar benefit was observed in both distant DFS (92% for MFT vs. 87% for tamoxifen, P=0.008; 91% for CMFT vs. 87% for tamoxifen, P=0.006) and OS (97% for MFT vs. 94% for tamoxifen, P=0.05; 96% for CMFT vs. 94% for tamoxifen, P=0.03).56
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Results from the B-20 study were recently updated with 8 years of follow-up data and continue to demonstrate a significant improvement in DFS and OS with the addition of chemotherapy to tamoxifen when compared to tamoxifen alone (84% vs. 77%, P=0.001, for DFS; 92% vs. 88% for OS, P=0.018) (figure 10
).42
An additional update of the NSABP B-20 data was recently presented at the 2002 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.57 In that analysis, the effect of chemotherapy when added to tamoxifen was examined according to age among the groups of <50, 50 to 59, and 60 years or older. It was evident from that analysis that the effect of chemotherapy when added to tamoxifen was limited to patients <60 years of age and it was not seen in patients 60 years or older.
The results of the above trials in patients with node-negative, ER-positive breast cancer clearly demonstrate that significant progress has been made in this group of patients with the combination of tamoxifen and adjuvant chemotherapy. As a result, the majority of patients are not in need of any further treatment.
One approach in order to reduce the over-treatment of node-negative patients in future research protocols is to attempt to identify clinical, patient and tumor characteristics that correlate with risk for recurrence (prognostic factors) or with the probability of response to a certain adjuvant treatment regimen (predictive factors). Analyses from the NSABP B-14 trial have shown that several independent prognostic factors exist that can be used in categorizing patients to high- and low-risk groups, thus aiding in the selection of appropriate adjuvant therapy regimens (i.e., age, tumor size, progesterone receptor status and S-phase).58 In the future, these factors will be valuable when attempting to select appropriate patient populations for addressing new research questions.
For example, one approach for the low-risk group of patients might be the evaluation of low-toxicity therapies such as drugs with hormonal, biologic or immunologic mechanisms of action (i.e., Cox-2 inhibitors). Drugs with little or no toxicity become prime candidates for evaluation in groups of patients where the absolute benefit in terms of reduction in recurrence and death is expected to be only few percentage points. On the other hand, for high-risk patients, additional chemotherapy-related questions can be explored either alone or in conjunction with biological questions. This approach was taken in a new NSABP clinical trial comparing 4 cycles of AC to 6 cycles of FEC (fluorouracil, epirubicin, cyclophosphamide) with or without celecoxib.
| PREOPERATIVE CHEMOTHERAPY TRIALS |
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In addition, several preclinical and clinical observations have provided biological rationale as to why such an intervention may have an advantage over the administration of chemotherapy in the conventional postoperative fashion.5962 Several single-institution, non-randomized clinical series did evaluate preoperative chemotherapy in patients with operable breast cancer, but before such treatment could become standard clinical practice it had to be evaluated in prospective randomized clinical trials.
In 1988, the NSABP initiated protocol B-18, a randomized trial in patients with operable breast cancer to compare pre-operative versus postoperative administration of adjuvant chemotherapy (figure 11
). Following diagnosis of breast cancer by fine needle aspiration or core needle biopsy, patients were randomized to receive either surgery (lumpectomy and axillary node dissection or modified radical mastectomy) followed by 4 cycles of AC chemotherapy every 21 days, or the same chemotherapy followed by surgery. Patients 50 years of age or older were also given 10 mg tamoxifen twice daily for 5 years starting after completion of adjuvant chemotherapy.
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Between October 1988 and April 1993, 1,523 patients were accrued into the trial. Results pertaining to the effect of preoperative chemotherapy on tumor response63,64 indicated that, following administration of preoperative chemotherapy, 36% of patients obtained a clinical complete response (cCR) and 43% of patients obtained a clinical partial response (cPR) for an overall response rate of 79%. Seventeen percent of patients were classified as having stable disease and 3% as having progressive disease. More importantly, 9% of the patients were found to have no tumor present on pathologic examination of the lumpectomy or mastectomy specimen, while another 4% were found to have only non-invasive tumor present in the surgical specimen, for an overall pathologic complete response rate (pCR) of 13%.
Administration of preoperative chemotherapy resulted in pathologic axillary lymph node downstaging. Whereas 59% of the patients receiving postoperative chemotherapy were found at surgery to have pathologically positive axillary nodes, only 43% of patients receiving preoperative chemotherapy were found to have nodal involvement. This difference was statistically significant (P<0.001) and amounted to axillary nodal downstaging in 16% of all patients receiving preoperative chemotherapy or in 37% of the patients presumed to be node-positive at the time of administration of pre-operative chemotherapy.
Patients receiving preoperative chemotherapy were significantly more likely to receive a lumpectomy than were patients receiving postoperative chemotherapy (67% vs. 60%, P=0.002). When the two treatment groups were compared in terms of outcome,65 there was no difference in the DFS, distant DFS or OS between the two groups. There was evidence of significant correlation between pathologic response of primary breast tumors to preoperative chemotherapy and DFS and OS. Patients achieving a pCR had a statistically significant improvement in DFS and OS compared to those who had a cCR but residual invasive carcinoma in the breast specimen (pINV) or those who had a cPR or those who had a clinical non-response (cNR). When the prognostic effect of pCR was examined after adjusting for other known clinical prognostic factors such as clinical nodal status, clinical tumor size and age, pCR remained a significant independent predictor for DFS and a borderline significant predictor for OS.
Recently updated outcome results from the B-18 study continue to demonstrate that the equivalence between preoperative and postoperative chemotherapy, and the significant correlation between pCR and outcome has persisted through 9 years of follow-up (figure 11
).66 At 9 years, the DFS rate for patients achieving a pCR was 75% as compared with 58% for patients with pINV. For OS, the respective rate was 85% for patients achieving a pCR and 73% for patients with pINV. Overall, primary tumor response graded as pCR, pINV, cPR and cNR was strongly associated with all outcome measures (OS: P=0.0008; DFS: P=0.00005; relapse-free survival: P=0.0002). Similar to the previous results, these significant associations persisted after adjustment for clinical tumor size, clinical nodal status and age at randomization (OS: P=0.006; DFS: P=0.004; relapse-free survival: P=0.00006). The results further demonstrated that primary tumor response in the breast contributed additional prognostic information over and above pathologic nodal status (OS: P=0.06; DFS: P=0.006; relapse-free survival: P=0.004).
The results from the B-18 trial strengthened the biologic and clinical rationale for continuing to evaluate the role of preoperative chemotherapy in patients with operable breast cancer.67 If response to preoperative chemotherapy continues to correlate with patient outcome when newer preoperative chemotherapy regimens are used, then response to chemotherapy can be used as an intermediate endpoint in testing new chemotherapy regimens or new drugs administered after standard regimens. This approach may also facilitate the evaluation of many of the proven and putative prognostic tumor markers (e.g., estrogen-receptors, progesterone-receptors, ploidy and S-phase, erb-B2 and p53 oncogene) in material obtained by FNA or core needle biopsies and the potential correlation of these markers, individually or in combination, with tumor response to preoperative chemotherapy and eventually with outcome.
As a result, subgroups of patients with a high likelihood of pCR may be identified that could be spared from additional local or systemic therapy interventions. Furthermore, serially monitoring tumor marker changes while a tumor is undergoing preoperative chemotherapy may provide biological insight into the nature and function of these markers. Knowledge may also be obtained regarding the mechanisms of action of new chemotherapeutic agents or new treatment modalities.
The demonstration of significant antitumor activity with taxanes in patients with advanced breast cancer provided the opportunity to take results from the NSABP B-18 trial a step further and also address some of the above questions. In 1995 the NSABP implemented protocol B-27. This was a randomized trial that evaluated the worth of docetaxel when administered in the preoperative or the postoperative setting following 4 cycles of preoperative AC chemotherapy68 (figure 12
). The main objective of the study was to determine whether the addition of 4 cycles of preoperative or postoperative docetaxel, following 4 cycles of preoperative AC, could more effectively prolong DFS and OS in patients with operable breast cancer than 4 cycles of preoperative AC alone. Secondary objectives of the B-27 protocol were to determine whether the addition of preoperative docetaxel following preoperative AC could increase the rate of loco-regional response, pCR, pathologic axillary nodal down-staging and breast conserving surgery. Additional secondary objectives were to determine whether any benefit from the addition of postoperative docetaxel after preoperative AC, might be limited to specific subgroups of patients, (i.e., those with residual positive nodes after preoperative AC).
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All patients received 20 mg tamoxifen PO daily beginning on day one of the first AC course and continuing for 5 years. The eligibility criteria included localized, operable carcinoma of the breast diagnosed by FNA or core biopsy and palpable on physical examination. Palpable axillary nodes of any size were allowed but they had to be movable in relation to the chest wall and surrounding structures.
The trial opened in December 1995 and closed in December 2000 after accruing 2,411 patients. The preliminary results from this trial relative to the comparison of response rates between patients treated with preoperative AC and those treated with preoperative AC followed by preoperative docetaxel were presented at the 2001 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.69 The results demonstrated that, compared to the group that received preoperative AC alone, the group that received preoperative AC followed by preoperative docetaxel achieved significantly higher rates of cCR (cCR: 40.4 vs. 65.4%; P<0.001), overall clinical response (cCR + cPR: 85.7% vs. 91.1%; P<0.001) and pCR (pCR: 25.6% vs. 13.7%; P<0.001). The addition of pre-operative docetaxel to preoperative AC also resulted in significant downstaging of axillary lymph nodes. Whereas 50.7% of the patients were node-negative after preoperative AC alone, 58.1% did so after preoperative AC and preoperative docetaxel (P<0.01).
In contrast the observations from the B-18 trial, the increase in clinical and pathologic response rates with preoperative docetaxel did not translate to a significant increase in the rate of breast conservation. Breast-conserving surgery was performed in 61.4% of AC treated patients and in 63.1% of patients treated with AC followed by docetaxel (P=0.70). As was also previously shown in the B-18 trial, clinical and pathologic primary breast tumor response was a significant predictor of pathologic nodal status. DFS and OS data are not yet available.
Two ancillary studies were conducted along with the main B-27 trial. These evaluated serum and tumor biomarkers as they relate to outcome and response to preoperative AC or docetaxel chemotherapy. The first (NSABP B-27.1) evaluated the worth of serum Erb-B2 extra-cellular domain (ECD) and serum Erb-B2 antibodies in predicting response to preoperative chemotherapy and long-term outcome. In addition, by obtaining serum at specified times (i.e., before administration and after completion of preoperative chemotherapy, after surgery, 1 year after randomization, and at the time of recurrence), this study is able to evaluate whether potential changes in the levels of erb-B2 ECD and erb-B2 antibodies are induced by chemotherapy or are associated with breast cancer recurrence.
The second ancillary trial (NSABP B-27.2) evaluated the worth of tumor biomarkers obtained by FNA or core biopsy in predicting response to preoperative chemotherapy and long-term outcome in B-27 patients. The study also evaluated whether preoperative chemotherapy results in changes in tumor biomarker expression, and whether these changes can be correlated with tumor response and long-term outcome. The following biomarkers were evaluated: nuclear grade, estrogen and progesterone receptors, proliferation markers, p53 oncogene mutations, erb-B2 over-expression, P-glycoprotein, and apoptosis markers (bcl-2). Results from these two ancillary trials are not yet available.
The NSABP is currently developing new neoadjuvant trial concepts that seeks to incorporate high throughput technology to identify patients with tumors at high likelihood of achieving a pCR when treated with a certain neo-adjuvant chemotherapy regimen. The plan is to compare the activity (in terms of inducing pCR) of various sequential anthracycline/taxane regimens that incorporate new agents such as capecitabine, vinorelbine and carboplatin in combination with taxane. By using high throughput technology, genomic signatures could be identified that are associated with tumors with high likelihood of pCR when exposed to a certain neoadjuvant regimen. If the same regimen is then found to induce high rates of pCR in patients from another cohort whose tumors express that particular genomic signature, the potential of tailoring neoadjuvant chemotherapy according to differences in tumor gene expression profiles might become a reality.
| TRIALS IN PATIENTS WITH POSITIVE NODES |
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In all three groups, patients 50 years of age or older also received 10 mg tamoxifen PO twice a day for 5 years. Patients receiving lumpectomy also received radiation after the completion of their assigned chemotherapy. Results from this study, after four years of follow-up, did not demonstrate a benefit from dose-intensification.70 There were no significant differences between the three different treatment groups in terms of DFS, distant DFS and OS. Overall toxicity was more pronounced in the groups receiving the intensified dose and increased total dose of cyclophosphamide.
Around the time of completion of the NSABP B-22 study, colony stimulating factors became available in the clinic and made it feasible to administer even higher cyclophosphamide doses in the outpatient setting.71 As a result, the NSABP conducted a second study of dose intensification (NSABP B-25). In this study, patients with histologically positive axillary lymph nodes were randomized to receive either:
In all three groups, all patients received prophylactic G-CSF. In all three groups, patients 50 years of age or over also received tamoxifen 10 mg PO twice a day for 5 years. Patients receiving lumpectomy also received radiation after the completion of their assigned chemotherapy.
Results from this second study were also recently published and are similar to those from the B-22 study in that they did not demonstrate an added benefit from dose intensification or from increasing the total dose of cyclophosphamide in the AC combination.72
Studies evaluating taxanes as adjuvant therapy
Given the disappointing results from the studies of dose intensification in patients with node-positive breast cancer, the introduction of new agents with novel mechanisms of action became an important alternative approach to increase treatment effectiveness. Among the agents that have become available for clinical testing in the past several years, taxanes seem to possess the most favorable antitumor properties. Preclinical data and clinical studies in advanced breast cancer indicate that these agents have significant antitumor activity and are worth evaluating in the adjuvant setting. Furthermore, some have argued that the sequential administration of chemotherapeutic agents may be more beneficial than the administration of these agents in combination.
Thus, in 1995 the NSABP initiated a randomized trial (NSABP B-28) to evaluate the worth of paclitaxel following standard dose AC chemotherapy in breast cancer patients with positive axillary nodes. Eligible patients were randomly assigned to receive 4 cycles of AC chemotherapy or 4 cycles of AC followed by 4 cycles of paclitaxel at 225 mg/m2 given as a 3-hour infusion.
Beginning on the first day of administration of their assigned chemotherapy, all patients
50 years of age and those <50 years of age with tumors that are ER-positive or progesterone receptor (PgR)-positive also received tamoxifen at 20 mg PO daily for 5 years. All patients in both groups who underwent lumpectomy also received radiation after completion of their assigned chemotherapy.
This study completed accrual in 1998. Preliminary results from an interim analysis were presented at the NIH Consensus Development Conference in November of 2000 and, at that time with 34 months of median follow-up they did not demonstrate a statistically significant advantage for the group of patients receiving paclitaxel.73 Definitive DFS and OS analyses were recently presented at the 2003 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) meeting. With 64 months of median follow-up, there is now a significant improvement in DFS in favor of the group randomized to AC followed by paclitaxel, but no significant difference in survival at this point.74
The next logical step in the clinical development of taxanes as adjuvant treatment for breast cancer was to compare the sequential ACtaxane regimens (as administered in the first generation adjuvant studies with taxanes) with combination regimens of taxanes with other active existing agents. Thus far, doxorubicin and docetaxel are among the most active agents against breast cancer. Combinations of doxorubicin with paclitaxel have demonstrated excellent response rates in phase II studies of patients with advanced breast cancer but have also been associated with a significant increase in cardiotoxicity.75,76 Similar cardiotoxicity was not seen in phase III studies when docetaxel was used in combination with doxorubicin, although the increased efficacy was maintained.7780
Based on the above studies, as well as phase III trials,82 the NSABP B-30 study was designed to directly compare the sequential regimen of AC followed by docetaxel to the combination of doxorubicin plus docetaxel and to the triple combination of doxorubicin plus docetaxel plus cyclophosphamide. (figure 13
) This trial was initiated in 1999 and has accrued more than 4,500 of the 5,300 patients needed.
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During the past decade there has been an explosion in development of biologically-targeted therapies that have the promise of improving adjuvant therapy efficacy without significant increase in toxicity. Several approaches have been validated in the advanced disease setting and are currently being evaluated in adjuvant trials. The evaluation of trastuzumab and bisphosphonates in NSABP adjuvant trials represent examples of how new molecular targeted therapies are being evaluated in the adjuvant setting.
NSABP study evaluating adjuvant trastuzumab
During the 1990s, a substantial amount of information accumulated in support of a significant role for the HER-2/neu oncogene in breast cancer, both as a predictor of benefit from anthracycline-containing chemotherapy8386 as well as a therapeutic target for antibody development.87,88 As results from dose intensification studies strongly suggested the existence of a "limit of cytoreduction" and as the over-expression of the HER-2/neu oncogene indicated chemo resistance, it was hypothesized that targeting HER-2 with an inhibitory antibody such as trastuzumab (humanized monoclonal antibody against the extracellular domain of HER-2/neu) might overcome resistance and augment the chemotherapy effect. In the advanced-disease setting, trastuzumab has activity as a single agent87 and significantly increases the efficacy of chemotherapy in terms of response rates, time to progression and OS.88 However, these improvements were associated with a substantial increase in cardiotoxicity, particularly when an anthracycline-containing regimen was combined with trastuzumab.
The NSABP B-31 trial is a randomized trial designed to evaluate the role of trastuzumab in the adjuvant setting. This trial tests the worth of trastuzumab when added to the AC followed by paclitaxel regimen but trastuzumab administration begins with the first cycle of paclitaxel (figure 14
).
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This is a unique trial in that it attempts to promptly incorporate a new, exciting agent into the adjuvant setting and at the same time pays particular attention to the toxicity concerns raised from studies in the advanced disease setting. Furthermore, important, built-in biological correlative studies aim to discover markers that predict benefit from the addition of Herceptin to chemotherapy such as phosphorylation status of HER-2, extracellular domain levels, auto-antibodies and array-based comparative genomic hybridization (CGH).
Studies evaluating bisphosphonates as adjuvant therapy
Bisphosphonates are emerging as a class of drugs with great potential for improving the outcome of breast cancer without adversely affecting patients quality of life and without causing significant toxicity. Bisphosphonates act by inhibiting osteoclast function with subsequent reduction in bone loss. They have been found effective in patients with Pagets disease, osteoporosis and malignant bone disease. Other mechanisms of action of bisphosphonates include a reduction in malignant cell adhesion to bone as well as decreased osteoblast-mediated-osteoclast stimulation and adsorption to bone resorption surfaces leading to protection against osteoclast act