Clinical outcomes of de novo metastatic HER2-positive inflammatory breast cancer

Author:

Garrido-Castro Ana C.ORCID,Regan Meredith M.,Niman Samuel M.,Nakhlis FainaORCID,Remolano Claire,Rosenbluth Jennifer M.,Block Caroline,Warren Laura E.ORCID,Bellon Jennifer R.,Yeh Eren,Harrison Beth T.ORCID,Troll Elizabeth,Lin Nancy U.,Tolaney Sara M.ORCID,Overmoyer BethORCID,Lynce FilipaORCID

Abstract

AbstractInflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is a rare, aggressive form of breast cancer that presents as de novo metastatic disease in 20–30% of cases, with one-third of cases demonstrating HER2-positivity. There has been limited investigation into locoregional therapy utilization following HER2-directed systemic therapy for these patients, and their locoregional progression or recurrence (LRPR) and survival outcomes. Patients with de novo HER2-positive metastatic IBC (mIBC) were identified from an IRB-approved IBC registry at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. Clinical, pathology, and treatment data were abstracted. Rates of LRPR, progression-free survival (PFS), overall survival (OS), and pathologic complete response (pCR) were determined. Seventy-eight patients diagnosed between 1998 and 2019 were identified. First-line systemic therapy comprised chemotherapy for most patients (97.4%) and HER2-directed therapy for all patients (trastuzumab [47.4%]; trastuzumab+pertuzumab [51.3%]; or trastuzumab emtansine [1.3%]). At a median follow-up of 2.7 years, the median PFS was 1.0 year, and the median OS was 4.6 years. The 1- and 2-year cumulative incidence of LRPR was 20.7% and 29.0%, respectively. Mastectomy was performed after systemic therapy in 41/78 patients (52.6%); 10 had a pCR (24.4%) and all were alive at last follow-up (1.3–8.9 years after surgery). Among 56 patients who were alive and LRPR-free at one year, 10 developed LRPR (surgery group = 1; no-surgery group = 9). In conclusion, patients with de novo HER2-positive mIBC who undergo surgery have favorable outcomes. More than half of patients received systemic and local therapy with good locoregional control and prolonged survival, suggesting a potential role for local therapy.

Funder

This study was funded by the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute IBC Research Fund and the Reardon Family Fund.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Oncology

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