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Chinese Female Breast Cancer Patients Show A Better Overall Survival Than Their Male Counterparts XIA Liangping,1,2 ZHOU Feifei,1,2 GUO Guifang,1,2 WANG Fang,1,2 WANG Xi,1,3YUAN Zhongyu1,4 and ZHUAN Bei1,2 1 State Key Laboratory of Oncology in South China, Sun Yat-sen Universty Cancer Center, Guangzhou, Guangdong, 510060, R.P. China 2 VIP Region, Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center, Guangzhou, Guangdong, 510060, R.P. China 3 Department of Breast Oncology, Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center, Guangzhou, Guangdong, 510060, R.P. China 4 Department of Medical Oncology, Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center, Guangzhou, Guangdong, 510060, R.P. China Corresponding author: XIA Liangping Email: [email protected] Tel: +8620-87343107 Mobile: 13926410608 Address: 651 Dongfeng Road East, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China Abstract: Backgroud: The aim of this study was to compare the prognosis of MBC and FBC patients in China and the prognosis of MBC and their corresponding postmenopausal FBC patients. Methods: Thirty five MBC patients who were treated at the Cancer Center of Sun Yat-sen University between 1969 and 2004 were enrolled in the study. Seventy FBC patients who were matched with the MBC patients for TNM stage, year of diagnosis and age at diagnosis were simultaneously enrolled in the study. A second group comprising 18 MBC patients and their corresponding 36 matched postmenopausal FBC patients were also enrolled. The whole group and the postmenopausal groups were compared for five and ten year survival curves. Results: All the factors that could potentially affect prognosis were balanceable among the groups except more FBC than MBC patients underwent endocrine therapy and a modified radical mastectomy. The 5 and 10 year survival values in the whole group were 81.6% and 60.3% for men and 90.7% and 73.5% for women. The difference between the two matched groups was significant (P = 0.02). The 5 and 10 year survival in the postmenopausal group were 82.5% and 100% for men and 66.0% and 85.9% for women. The difference between the two matched groups was insignificant (P = 0.159). Conclusions: Chinese FBC patients had a better prognosis than Chinese MBC patients. However, MBC patients and their corresponding postmenopausal FBC patients had a similar prognosis. Key words: male breast cancer; female breast cancer; postmenopausal; prognosis INTRODUCTION Male breast cancer (MBC) has been investigated only in small single institution retrospective studies or by extrapolation from female breast cancer studies (1). MBC patients are generally older than FBC patients at diagnosis, exhibit more frequent lymph node involvement, present at a more advanced stage, show a predominant proportion of infiltrating ductal carcinoma and have higher expression levels of estrogen receptor (ER) and/or progesterone receptor (PR) (1, 2). These differences may be associated with a higher cancer-specific death rate in MBC (2). It is not clear if there is a difference in prognosis between MBC and FBC (1, 3, 4). Previous studies have speculated on the possibility of distinct pathways of oncogenesis in MBC and FBC (5). It has been reported that more FBC patients are premenopausal in China than in western countries (6). The differences between MBC and FBC have not been investigated to date and all studies on Chinese MBC have analyzed small patient populations (21.18±1.10 patients/study; range from 5 to 65 [data not shown]). The goal of our present study was to compare the prognosis in Chinese MBC and FBC patients. Our study is the first prognostic comparison of Chinese male and female breast cancer patients. This is also the first study in the world comparing the prognosis of MBC patients with that of postmenopausal FBC patients who are considered clinically similar to MBC patients (1). METHODS The data for our study were obtained from the retrospective breast cancer database at the Cancer Center of Sun Yat-sen University. The data included all MBC and FBC patients with stage Ⅰ~Ⅲ breast cancer, diagnosed between June 1, 1969 until November 30, 2004. We collected data from at least 5 years of follow-up visits. Inclusion criteria for the study were 1) Availability of accurate TNM staging 2) Availability of well-documented clinical information 3) Availability of follow-up clinical information for more than five years 4) StageⅠ~Ⅲ 5) Curative intent. Exclusion criteria for the study were 1) Presence of metastatic lesions at initial diagnosis. 2) Patient undergone breast surgery at a different institution. Each MBC patient was carefully matched with two FBC patients for 1) age at diagnosis (more than 90% patients within ± 2 years) 2) year of diagnosis (within ± 2 year) and 3) identical clinical stage at diagnosis (7, 8). When more than two women met the matching criteria, the first two patients were chosen (8). Thirty five MBC patients and 70 matched FBC patients were enrolled in the study. In the postmenopausal group, both the matched FBC patients were in the postmenopausal state at diagnosis. The postmenopausal group enrolled 18 MBC patients and 36 matched FBC patients. Statistical analysis The chi-square test or Fisher’s exact test was used to compare the breast cancer characteristics between men and women for qualitative data and the t-test for quantitative data. Overall survival was calculated using Kaplan-Meier method. The end points for 5- and 10-year survivals were death, irrespective of the cause. P values <0.05 were considered statistically significant. Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS13.0 for Windows. RESULTS 1. The basic characteristics of study groups We analyzed the basic characteristics of our study groups, including median of age, year of diagnosis, TNM stage, tumor laterity, skin/nipple involvement, pathological subtypes, HER2 expression, ER/PR expression, time to diagnosis, and time of follow-up (Table 1). The first three characteristics (especially the TNM stage which was identical in each matched group) were the criteria used for matching the MBC and FBC patients. There were no significant differences in any of these characteristics between the MBC and FBC entire group as well as the postmenopausal group. Since all treatment strategies were potential prognostic factors which could affect the results, we carried out a comparison (Table 2) of treatment strategies including treatment modalities, adjuvant chemotherapy, postoperative radiotherapy, endocrine treatment, and surgery (9). We observed that in the FBC group, more patients, both in the whole group and postmenopausal group, accepted endocrine therapy (P=0.038, P=0.006) and modified radical mastectomy (P=0.001, P=0.005). The two groups were well matched in all other respects. 2. Survival curves in the two groups Figure 1 shows the survival curve of the whole group. Whole group 5 and 10 year survivals were 81.6% and 60.3% for men, and 90.7% and 73.5% for women, respectively. The difference between the two matched groups was significant (P = 0.02). The postmenopausal group 5 and 10 year survivals were 82.5% and 100% for men, and 66.0% and 85.9% for women, respectively. The difference between the two matched groups was not significant (P = 0.159). Figure 2 represesnts the survival curve of the postmenopausal group. DISCUSSION While some previous retrospective studies including case-control studies (7, 8, 10-15) and population-based studies (3, 4, 15-20) showed prognostic differences between MBC and FBC, others were inconclusive. This inconsistency may be associated with the extremely low incidence of MBC, making it impossible to conduct prospective randomized phase Ⅲclinical trials which are required to answer a question of this nature (20, 21). However, our results agreed with a previous study (8) and demonstrated that FBC patients had a better prognosis than MBC patients when the whole group was analyzed. When we analyzed potential prognostic factors before prognosis analysis, we found that both the groups were comparable. What then, causes a difference in prognosis between the MBC and FBC groups? MBC occurs on the average, 10 years later than FBC (22, 23). This makes the impact of comorbidities and second neoplasms more important and can confound comparative results. To illustrate this fact, the ‘Adjuvant Online’ program was used to calculate the death risks of two hypothetical patients who differed only in age (20). It was observed that the 10 year survival in a 63-year old patient with pT2N1, grade 2 ER+ tumor and minor health problems, and without adjuvant treatment was 57.7% (with 33.3% and 9.0% death risks from breast cancer and ‘other causes’, respectively). In another case, a 73-year old patient with the same type of tumor had a 31% risk of death from breast cancer and a 20.5% risk of death from ‘other causes’. Approximately 11% of the MBC patients experienced second cancers, the most common of which were cutaneous melanoma and stomach cancer (24). They also exhibited a high incidence of cardiovascular, neurological and respiratory diseases. These data suggest that in these patients, the risk of death from non-specific diseases other than cancer, increases with an increase in age. This phenomenon existed in clinical practice demonstrated by the French Cancer Centres study(25). Disease-specific survival (DSS) rather than OS, therefore became a more suitable marker to study MBC prognosis (7, 8, 11-13, 15, 25-27). With OS as the end point, there was no difference in 5-year survival between MBC and FBC patients. However, with DSS as the end point, the same studies showed a significant difference between the two groups (8). Some studies showed that DSS remained the same in the two groups while OS was better in FBC patients (7). Since the case-control studies were similar to our study and matched patients for age at diagnosis, we believe that the risk of comorbidities is similar in both populations. We therefore believe that the age at diagnosis did not play a role in the differential prognosis between MBC and FBC patients in our study. Although we did not calculate DSS in this study, we believe that OS reflects the prognosis of MBC and FBC patients since the age at diagnosis was matched. We also investigated the role of ER/PR status and HER2 status in the prognostic differences between the two groups. Expression levels of ER/PR have been shown to be higher in MBC patients than in FBC patients (1). However, our data agree with a study showing that HER2 expression levels are lower in MBC patients than in FBC patients (28). Since ER/PR and HER2 predict prognosis in breast cancer (29, 30), we believe that this may play a role in the difference in prognosis between our two study groups. ER/PR status and HER2 status have been shown to be predictive factors of response to endocrine therapy and trastuzumab treatment respectively (29). In our study, a lower number of male patients underwent endocrine therapy, resulting in a lost opportunity to achieve a good outcome. We showed that MBC patients had a worse 5-year survival rate than FBC patients (81.6% versus 90.7%). We believe that this phenomenon can be overcome when doctors and patients are educated on the advantages of treating MBC and FBC patients using similar endocrine therapeutic strategies. The presence of strongly PR-positive nuclei is a predictor of response to tamoxifen treatment in premenopausal women with breast cancer (31). Similarly, PR negativity in postmenopausal women with ER positive and PR-negative tumors is considered a marker of tamoxifen resistance (32). These data suggest that PR, which is more likely to be expressed in male breast cancer tumors, would enable these patients to mount an effective response to endocrine therapy. However, results from a recent study comparing the effects of arimidex alone, tamoxifen alone or combination treatment may not support this notion (33). Therefore, although MBC is characterized by higher levels of ER/PR expression and lower levels of HER2 expression, the significance of this difference in expression levels may be different in MBC and FBC (34). We propose that differences in treatment modalities may be the most important factor in the prognostic difference between the MBC and FBC groups. We demonstrated that more FBC patients underwent endocrine therapy (P<0.05). Fewer FBC patients accepted surgery alone as a treatment option (P≈0.05) which may play an important role in the prognostic difference between the groups. Our data agreed with previous results (35-38) including from our group [39], showing that more MBC patients underwent radical mastectomy instead of modified radical mastectomy, which is more common in FBC patients. However, these studies demonstrated that the two surgery models had an equivalent efficacy and were therefore unlikely to cause the difference in prognosis between the two groups. We asked if MBC and postmenopausal FBC had the same prognosis. Based on the Cancer Incidence Public-Use database of the National Cancer Institute’s Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER), which includes 381,128 cases of FBC and 2560 cases of MBC, a previous study (1) found that male breast cancer was more like postmenopausal than premenopausal female breast cancer in the following three aspects (1) age-frequency distribution, (2) prognostic factor profiles reflective of tumor biology (nuclear grade and hormone receptor expression), and (3) age specific incidence rate patterns. We compared the prognosis in the 18 MBC and corresponding 36 postmenopausal FBC patients enrolled in our study and showed that the 5 and 10 year survival curves of the two groups were similar. Therefore, although all the factors that could potentially impact prognosis were similar in the whole group and the postmenopausal group, there was a difference in prognosis between MBC and FBC patients between the two groups. The lack of a significant prognostic difference in the postmenopausal group may be related to small patient numbers, and may result from more younger patients, who usually showed a poorer prognosis than older patients [19], excluded from the postmenopausal group. To our knowledge, this is the first study comparing matched male and female breast cancer patients in China and the first study worldwide directly comparing the prognosis of MBC and postmenopausal FBC patients. We believe that the long follow up time of 71-116 months and balancing of all the basic characteristics which could potentially impact prognosis, ensure the results of this study believable. We demonstrated that although FBC patients had a better 5 and 10 year survival in the whole group, the FBC and MBC groups showed similar 5 and 10 year survival curves when the population was limited to the postmenopausal group. We propose that the difference in prognosis between MBC and FBC patients in this study was closely associated with the different treatment strategies in the two groups. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We are grateful to all the doctors who performed surgeries and thank the patients for their participation in this study. We thank Professor Hao Yuantao for the statistical analyses and Miss Ma Xiu-fang from the Department of Follow-up in our Cancer Center who collected all the follow-up information. We thank Zhang Jianwei, Chen Zidong, and Li Pengliang for clinical data collection. References 1. Anderson WF, Althuis MD, Brinton LA, Devesa SS. Is male breast cancer similar or different than female breast cancer? Breast Cancer Res Treat 2004;83:77-86. 2. Malani AK. 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Guinee VF, Olsson H, Moller T, Shallenberger RC, van den Blink JW, Peter Z, et al. The prognosis of breast cancer in males. A report of 335 cases.Cancer 1993;71:154-161. 27. Donegan WL, Redlich PN, Lang PJ, Gall MT. Carcinoma of the breast in males: a multiinstitutional survey. Cancer 1998;83:498-509. 28. Rudlowski C, Friedrichs N, Faridi A, Füzesi L, Moll R, Bastert G, et al. Her-2/neu gene amplification and protein expression in primary male breast cancer. Breast Cancer Res Treat 2004;84:215-223. 29. Tiezzi DG, Andrade JM, Ribeiro-Silva A, Zola FE, Marana HR, Tiezzi MG. HER-2, p53, p21 and hormonal receptors proteins expression as predictive factors of response and prognosis in locally advanced breast cancer treated with neoadjuvant docetaxel plus epirubicin combination.BMC Cancer 2007;7:36. 30. Bentel JM, Birrell SN, Pickering MA, Holds DJ, Horsfall DJ, Tilley WD. Androgen receptor agonist activity of the synthetic progestin, medroxyprogesterone acetate in human breast cancer cells. Mol Cell Endocrinol 1999,154:11-20. 31. Stendahl M, Rydén L, Nordenskjöld B, Jönsson PE, Landberg G, Jirström K. High progesterone receptor expression correlates to the effect of adjuvant tamoxifen in premenopausal breast cancer patients. Clin Cancer Res 2006;12:4614–4618. 32. Arpino G, Weiss H, Lee AV, Schiff R, De Placido S, Osborne CK, et al. Estrogen receptor-positive, progesterone receptor-negative breast cancer: Association with growth factor receptor expression and tamoxifen resistance. J Natl Cancer Inst 2005;97:1254–1261. 33. Dowsett M, Allred C, Knox J, Quinn E, Salter J, Wale C, et al. Relationship between quantitative estrogen and progesterone receptor expression and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER-2) status with recurrence in the Arimidex, Tamoxifen, Alone or in Combination trial. J Clin Oncol 2008;26:1059-1065. 34. Nahleh ZA. 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Zhou FF, Xia LP, Guo GF, Wang X, Yuan ZY , Zhang B, et al. Changes of Therapeutic Strategies in Chinese Male Patients with Breast Cancer: 40 Years Experience of a Single Institute. Submission to “The Breast” Table 1. Patient demographics of the four matched groups Characteristics Male(N=35) Female(N=70) P* Male(N=18) Postmenopausal P** female(N= 36) Median of age 59(39-78) 58(36-76) 0.461 65(56-78) 65(51-76) o.682 (range) Year of diagnosis 0.998 1.000 1969-1979 5(14.3%) 11(15.7%) 2(11.1%) 4(11.1%) 1980-1989 7(20.0%) 14(20.0%) 4(22.2%) 8(22.2%) 1990-1999 13(37.1%) 25(35.7%) 8(44.4%) 16(44.4%) 2000-2004 10(28.6%) 20(28.6%) 4(22.2%) 8(22.2%) TNM 1.00 1.00 Ⅰ 12(34.3%) 24(34.3%) 9(50.0%) 18(50.0%) Ⅱ 14(40.0%) 28(40.0%) 8(44.4%) 16(44.4%) Ⅲ 9(25.7%) 18(25.7%) 1(5.6%) 2(5.6%) Tumor laterality 0.890 0.561 Left 17(46.6%) 33(47.1%) 7(38.9%) 17(47.2%) Right 18(51.4%) 37(52.9%) 11(61.1%) 19(52.8%) Skin/nipple 0.26 1.00 involvement No 28(80.0%) 67(95.7%) 17(94.4%) 35(97.2%) Yes 7(20.0%) 3(4.3%) 1(5.6%) 1(2.8%) Pathological types Infiltrating 0.517 0.481 29(82.9%) 59(84.3%) 14(77.8%) 29(80.6%) DISC 2(5.7%) 1(1.4%) 2(11.1%) 1(2.8%) others 4(11.4%) 10(14.3%) 2(11.1%) 6(16.7%) N=9 N=18 N=3 N=8 - 7(77.8%) 6(33.3%) 2(66.7%) 3(37.5%) + 1(11.1%) 6(33.3%) 0 2(25.0%) ++ 1(11.1%) 1(5.6%) 1(33.1%) 1(12.5%) +++ 0(0.0%) 5(27.8%) 0 2(25.0%) N=12 N=25 N=6 N=12 Both negative 1(8.3%) 8(32.0%) 0(0.00%) 3(25.0%) Both positive 9(75.0%) 13(52.0%) 6(100.0%) 8(66.7%) 2(16.7%) 4(16.0%) 0(0.0%) 1(8.3%) ductal carcinoma HER2 expression ER/PR expression ER positive or PR 0.033 0.366 0.450 0.676 Time to diagnosis Median 0.246 12 time,months(Range (7days-50 6 (2 days-13 years) years) 71 (18-391) 90(10-474) 0.287 12 (7 days-10 4 (2 days-13 years) years) 95(29-391) 116(29-257)- ) Median follow-up 0.816 0.853 months(range) * Comparison between MBC and all FBC; ** Comparison of postmenopausal FBC with matched MBC patients. DISC: Ductal in situ carcinoma. Table 2. Treatment strategies in the four patient groups Characteristics Male(N=35) Female(N=70) P* Male(N=18) Postmenopausal P** FBC(N=36) Treatment 0.055 0.053 modalities Comprehensive Operation only 28(80.0%) 66(94.3%) 12(66.7%) 33(91.7%) 7(20.0%) 4(5.7%) 6(33.3%) 3(8.3%) Adjuvant 0.165 0.554 chemotherapy Yes 16(45.7%) 42(60.0%) 6(33.3%) 15(41.7%) No 19(54.3%) 28(40.0%) 12(66.7%) 21(58.3%) Neoadjuvant 0.235 0.289 chemotherapy Yes 5(14.3%) 17(24.3%) 0(0.0%) No 30(85.7%) 53(75.7%) 18(100.0%) 12(88.9%) Adjuvant 4(11.1%) 0.622 1.00 radiotherapy Yes 7(20.0%) 17(24.3%) 3(16.7%) 7(19.4%) No 28(80.0%) 53(75.7%) Endocrine therapy 15(83.3%) 29(80.6%) 0.038 0.006 Yes 14(40.0%) 43(61.4%) 6(33.3%) 26(72.2%) No 21(60.0%) 27(38.6%) 12(66.7%) 10(27.8%) Operation model 0.001 0.005 RM 30(85.7%) 36(51.4%) 17(94.4%) 18(50.0%) MRM 3(8.6%) 25(35.7%) 1(5.6%) 13(36.1%) Others 1(2.9%) 9(12.9%) 0(0.0%) 5(13.9%) No 1(2.9%) 0(0.0%) 0(0.0%) 0(0.0%) * Comparison of MBC with all FBC patients; ** Comparison of MBC with matched postmenopausal FBC patients; .RM: Radical mastectomy; MRM: Modified radical mastectomy 1.0 Fe ma le S u rviva l ra te (% ) 0.8 0.6 Ma le 0.4 0.2 0.0 0.00 60.00 120.00 180.00 240.00 Tim e (m o n th s ) Figure 1. MBC and FBC survival curves in the whole group When the whole group was analyzed, the 5 and 10 year survivals were 81.6% and 60.3% for men, and 90.7% and 73.5% for women, respectively. The difference between the two matched groups was significant (P = 0.02). 1.0 Fe m a le 0.8 S u rviva l ra te (% ) Ma le 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0.00 60.00 120.00 180.00 240.00 Tim e (m o n th s ) Figure 2. MBC and FBC survival curves in the postmenopausal group The postmenopausal group comprised 18 MBC patients and 36 matched postmenopausal FBC patients. The 5 and 10 year survivals were 82.5% and 100% for men, and 66.0% and 85.9% for women, respectively. The difference between the two matched groups was insignificant (P = 0.159).