Clinical Utility of the 12-Gene DCIS Score Assay: Impact on Radiotherapy Recommendations for Patients with Ductal Carcinoma In Situ

Annals of Surgical Oncology - Tập 24 - Trang 660-668 - 2016
Jennifer B. Manders1, Henry M. Kuerer2, Benjamin D. Smith2, Cornelia McCluskey1, William B. Farrar3, Thomas G. Frazier4, Linna Li4, Charles E. Leonard5, Dennis L. Carter5, Sheema Chawla6, Lori E. Medeiros6, J. Michael Guenther7, Lauren E. Castellini7, Daniel J. Buchholz8, Eleftherios P. Mamounas8, Irene L. Wapnir9, Kathleen C. Horst9, Anees Chagpar10, Suzanne B. Evans10, Adam I. Riker11,12, Faisal S. Vali11, Lawrence J. Solin13, Lisa Jablon13, Abram Recht14, Ranjna Sharma14, Ruixiao Lu15, Amy P. Sing15, E. Shelley Hwang16, Julia White3
1The Christ Hospital Health Network, Cincinnati, USA
2University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, USA
3Ohio State University James Cancer Hospital, Columbus, USA
4Bryn Mawr Hospital, Bryn Mawr, USA
5Rocky Mountain Cancer Centers, Denver, USA
6Rochester Regional Health System, Rochester, USA
7Saint Elizabeth Medical Center, Inc., Edgewood, USA
8UF Health Cancer Center at Orlando Health, Orlando, USA
9Stanford Cancer Institute, Stanford University, Palo Alto, USA
10Yale University, New Haven, USA
11Advocate Christ Medical Center, Oak Lawn, USA
12Louisiana State University Health New Orleans, New Orleans, USA
13Albert Einstein Healthcare Network, Philadelphia, USA
14Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, USA
15Genomic Health Inc., Redwood City, USA
16Duke University Medical Center Durham, USA

Tóm tắt

The aim of this study was to determine the impact of the results of the 12-gene DCIS Score assay on (i) radiotherapy recommendations for patients with pure ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) following breast-conserving surgery (BCS), and (ii) patient decisional conflict and state anxiety. Thirteen sites across the US enrolled patients (March 2014–August 2015) with pure DCIS undergoing BCS. Prospectively collected data included clinicopathologic factors, physician estimates of local recurrence risk, DCIS Score results, and pre-/post-assay radiotherapy recommendations for each patient made by a surgeon and a radiation oncologist. Patients completed pre-/post-assay decisional conflict scale and state-trait anxiety inventory instruments. The analysis cohort included 127 patients: median age 60 years, 80 % postmenopausal, median size 8 mm (39 % ≤5 mm), 70 % grade 1/2, 88 % estrogen receptor-positive, 75 % progesterone receptor-positive, 54 % with comedo necrosis, and 18 % multifocal. Sixty-six percent of patients had low DCIS Score results, 20 % had intermediate DCIS Score results, and 14 % had high DCIS Score results; the median result was 21 (range 0–84). Pre-assay, surgeons and radiation oncologists recommended radiotherapy for 70.9 and 72.4 % of patients, respectively. Post-assay, 26.4 % of overall recommendations changed, including 30.7 and 22.0 % of recommendations by surgeons and radiation oncologists, respectively. Among patients with confirmed completed questionnaires (n = 32), decision conflict (p = 0.004) and state anxiety (p = 0.042) decreased significantly from pre- to post-assay. Individualized risk estimates from the DCIS Score assay provide valuable information to physicians and patients. Post-assay, in response to DCIS Score results, surgeons changed treatment recommendations more often than radiation oncologists. Further investigation is needed to better understand how such treatment changes may affect clinical outcomes.

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