Adjuvant ovarian function suppression and aromatase inhibitors in premenopausal patients with hormone receptor and HER2 positive breast cancer, by timing of chemotherapy and trastuzumab and response to neoadjuvant therapy

  • Ayelet Shai*
  • , Hans Wildiers
  • , Claudio Venieri
  • , Katarzyna Pogoda
  • , Barbro Linderholm
  • , Matteo Lambertini
  • , Leonor Matos
  • , Eleonora De Maio D'Esposito
  • , Nawale Hajjaji
  • , Erika Matos
  • , Lucía González Cortijo
  • , Giuseppe Fotia
  • , Ana Fortuna
  • , Tal Sella
  • , Helena Gouveia
  • , Laurent Rosset
  • , Anastasia Constantinidou
  • , Eurydice Angeli
  • , Irfan Cicin
  • , Vivianne Tjan-Heijnen
  • Natacha Ruyssers, Sofie Demasure, Areen Abu Remilah, Greet Huygh, Shani Paluch-Shimon, Edoardo Chiappe, Natali Shirron, Patrick Neven, Mehmet Artac, Bilgesah Kilictas, Jalal Baranseh, Elena Vicente-Rubio, Mustafa Atci, Ottavia Amato, Frederieke van Duijnhoven
*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Background: The benefit of adjuvant ovarian function suppression (OFS) and aromatase inhibitors (AI) in premenopausal patients with hormone receptor positive, HER2 positive (HR+/HER2+) breast cancer (BC) is unclear. We aimed to investigate this question in a retrospective cohort, stratified by timing (adjuvant or neoadjuvant) of chemotherapy and trastuzumab and by response to neoadjuvant therapy. Methods: Patients aged <45Y at diagnosis, with stage I-III HR + HER2+ BC, treated with (neo)adjuvant chemotherapy and trastuzumab ( ± pertuzumab) and endocrine therapy were included. LHRH-agonists and oophorectomy were considered OFS. We compared distant disease-free survival (DDFS) with tamoxifen, OFS + tamoxifen and OFS + AI in three cohorts: neoadjuvant–pathologic complete response (pCR), neoadjuvant-residual disease (RD) and adjuvant. Endocrine therapy (ET) was modeled as a time dependent covariate in cox logistic regression analyses. Results: The study included 1124 patients with median follow-up of 72.6 months (range:0–205 months). DDFS rates at 5 years were 83.9 %, 86.8 % and 92.1 % with tamoxifen, OFS + tamoxifen and OFS + AI respectively in the RD group, 94.3 %, 97.6 % and 96.5 % in the pCR group, and 94.3 %, 93.4 % and 98.6 % in the adjuvant group. OFS + AI was associated with better DDFS compared to tamoxifen in the RD group (n = 366) (multivariable weighted HR 0.28. 95 % CI 0.11-.069, p = 0.006), but associations of ET with DDFS in the pCR (n = 307, p = 0.59) and adjuvant (n = 451, p = 0.18) cohorts were not detected. Stage III was associated with worse DDFS in all groups. Conclusion: OFS + AI were associated with better DDFS in patients with RD after neoadjuvant therapy. Our findings can assist shared decision-making on adjuvant endocrine therapy of these patients.
Original languageEnglish
Article number104669
JournalBreast
Volume85
Early online date1 Jan 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2026

Keywords

  • Adjuvant endocrine therapy
  • Aromatase inhibitors
  • HER2 positive
  • LHRH agonists
  • Neoadjuvant
  • Ovarian function suppression
  • Pathological complete response
  • Residual disease
  • Tamoxifen

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