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Ten-year follow-up analysis of the BCIRG 001 trial confirms superior DFS and OS benefit of adjuvant TAC (docetaxel, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide) over FAC (fluorouracil, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide) in women with operable node-positive breast cancer Martin M, Mackey J, Pienkowski T, Rolski J, Guastalla JP, Sami A, Glaspy J, Juhos E, Wardley A, Fornander T, Hainsworth J, Coleman R, Modiano M, Vinholes J, Pinter T, Childs B, Roessner M, Wilson V, Rupin M, Vogel C on behalf of the BCIRG 001 Investigators NCT00688740 Sponsored by sanofi-aventis San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Disclosures Dr Martin has received speaker's honoraria from Sanofi-Aventis San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Adjuvant Chemotherapy • Adding a taxane to adjuvant anthracycline-based regimens improves survival in patients with early breast cancer1,2 • The BCIRG 001 (TAX316) study showed that TAC reduces the risk of relapse and death compared with FAC in patients with node-positive early breast cancer3 – Planned interim analysis; 399 DFS events – Median follow-up 55 months; data cut-off 15 July 2003 – DFS HR=0.72 (95%CI 0.59–0.88, P=0.001) – OS HR=0.70 (95%CI 0.53–0.91, P=0.008) 1Nowak AK, et al. Lancet Oncol 2004;5:372–380 Laurentiis M, et al. J Clin Oncol 2008;26:44–53 3Martin M, et al. N Engl J Med 2005;352:2302–2313 2De San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Final Analysis at 10-year Median Follow-up • DFS (primary endpoint) and OS • Rates of long-term toxicities, including cardiac events and hematologic malignancies • Data cut-off 11 March 2010 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Trial Design n=1491 20 countries 112 centers 75 mg/m2 T Docetaxel 50 mg/m2 A Doxorubicin C Cyclophosphamide 500 mg/m2 R Stratification • Nodal status 1-3 4+ • Center Every 3 weeks for 6 cycles F A C Fluorouracil 500 mg/m2 Doxorubicin 50 mg/m2 Cyclophosphamide 500 mg/m2 Dexamethasone premedication, 8 mg bid, 3 days Prophylactic ciprofloxacin 500 mg bid, days 5–14 No primary G-CSF prophylaxis was allowed San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Post Chemotherapy Treatment T A C F A C Tamoxifen 20 mg/day for 5 years • Patients with ER and/or PR positive tumors Radiation Therapy • All patients having breast-conserving surgery • Each center’s guidelines after mastectomy San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Major Eligibility Criteria • Histologically proven node-positive breast cancer • Definitive surgery with axillary lymph node dissection • Stage T1–3, N1, M0 • Normal hematologic, hepatic, renal, and cardiac function • No more than 60 days between surgery and randomization • Age ≤70 years and KPS ≥80% • Written informed consent San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 End Points and Follow-up • Objectives – Primary: disease-free survival – Secondary: overall survival, safety, quality of life, tumor markers • Timing for follow-up visits – Every 3 months for the first 2 years – Every 6 months up to year 5 – Yearly from years 5 to 10 Annual LVEF monitoring to evaluate long-term cardiac risk San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Statistics • DFS (primary analysis) – – – • Intention-to-treat (ITT) Log-rank test, stratified for nodal status (1 to 3 versus 4+ positive nodes) HR and 95% CI by Cox proportional hazards regression model Adverse Events – – NCI-CTC, version 1.0 Coding Symbols for Thesaurus of Adverse Reaction Terms (COSTART) San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Characteristics of the Patients (ITT) TAC (n=745) FAC (n=746) 49 (26–70) 49 (23–70) Median KPS 100 100 Premenopausal, % 57 55 Mastectomy, % 60 59 Radiotherapy, % 69 72 Tamoxifen, % 68 68 Median age, range Enrollment: 11 June 1997 to 03 June 1999 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Tumor Characteristics TAC (n=745) FAC (n=746) ≤2 40 43 >2 to 5 53 51 <5 8 6 1 to 3 63 62 4+ 37 38 ER+ and/or PR+* 76 76 HER2/neu+ (FISH)* 21 22 % patients Tumor size, cm Nodal status *Centrally reviewed San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 DFS Events (ITT) at 10 Years TAC (n=745) FAC (n=746) All (n=1491) Local relapse 32 (4) 36 (5) 68 (5) Regional relapse 9 (1) 14 (2) 23 (2) 174 (23) 214 (29) 388 (26) 2nd primary malignancy 56 (8) 53 (7) 109 (7) Death NED 15 (2) 16 (2) 31 (2) No. patients (%) First DFS event Distant relapse Undefined DFS event Lost to follow-up NED=no evidence of disease 1 (0.1) 43 (6) 0 39 (5) 1 (<0.1) 82 (6) San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 DFS at a Median 10-year Follow-up (ITT) Disease-free survival probability 1.00 TAC: 76% 0.80 HR=0.72 95%CI: 0.59–0.88 Log-rank P=0.001 0.60 FAC: 69% HR=0.80 95%CI: 0.68–0.93 Log-rank P=0.0043 0.40 0.20 0.00 0 6 12 18 24 30 36 42 48 54 60 66 72 78 84 90 96 102 108 114 120 Disease-free survival time (months) Number at Risk TAC 745 737 710 678 659 639 617 596 583 562 551 541 530 519 508 491 478 463 444 418 387 FAC 746 730 699 659 618 584 558 541 523 510 499 484 471 453 437 429 414 392 378 351 333 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 DFS in Predefined Subgroups In favor of TAC Overall ITT Adjusted* 0.80 (0.68 to 0.93) 1491 Number of positive nodes [1-3] 0.72 (0.58 to 0.91) 926 Number of positive nodes [4+] 0.87 (0.70 to 1.09) 565 Hormonal Receptor status Negative 0.66 (0.49 to 0.89) 359 Hormonal Receptor status Positive 0.84 (0.70 to 1.01) 1132 HER2/NEU status Negative 0.88 (0.72 to 1.08) 943 HER2/NEU status Positive 0.60 (0.43 to 0.83) 319 HER2/NEU status Unknown 0.80 (0.54 to 1.18) 229 Menopausal status Pre-menopausal 0.69 (0.55 to 0.86) 830 Menopausal status Post-menopausal 0.93 (0.74 to 1.16) 661 *Adjusted for nodal status 0.2 In favor of FAC 0.6 1.0 1.4 1.8 Hazard Ratio (95%CI) 2.2 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 OS at a Median 10-year Follow-up (ITT) 1.00 Overall survival probability TAC: 87% HR=0.70 95%CI: 0.53–0.91 Log-rank P=0.008 0.80 0.60 FAC: 81% HR=0.74 95%CI: 0.61–0.90 Log-rank P=0.002 0.40 0.20 0.00 0 6 12 18 24 30 36 42 48 54 60 66 72 78 84 90 96 102 108 114 120 Survival time (months) Number at Risk TAC 745 742 732 718 704 693 677 661 650 645 635 622 612 603 594 584 571 563 547 524 495 FAC 746 740 731 724 704 684 657 642 625 608 591 581 573 557 546 532 517 501 482 460 443 429 deaths: 188 TAC; 241 FAC San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 OS in Predefined Subgroups In favor of TAC Overall ITT Adjusted* 0.74 (0.61 to 0.90) 1491 Number of positive nodes [1–3] 0.62 (0.46 to 0.82) 926 Number of positive nodes [4+] 0.87 (0.67 to 1.12) 565 Hormonal Receptor status Negative 0.69 (0.49 to 0.96) 359 Hormonal Receptor status Positive 0.76 (0.60 to 0.96) 1132 HER2/NEU status Negative 0.79 (0.61 to 1.01) 943 HER2/NEU status Positive 0.66 (0.45 to 0.96) 319 HER2/NEU status Unknown 0.71 (0.44 to 1.14) 229 Menopausal status Pre-menopausal 0.65 (0.49 to 0.85) 830 Menopausal status Post-menopausal 0.85 (0.65 to 1.11) 661 *Adjusted for nodal status 0.2 In favor of FAC 0.6 1.0 1.4 1.8 Hazard Ratio (95%CI) 2.2 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Cardiac Toxicities Reported as an AE No. patients (%) Congestive heart failure* (cardiac function grade 3-4) Grade 3 (mild, responsive to therapy) Grade 4 (severe, refractory) Serious adverse event Death due to CHF TAC (n=744) FAC (n=736) 26 (4) 17 (2) 21 (3) 14 (2) 5 (1) 23 (3) 2 (0.3) *Comparison of CHF rates not statistically significant: TAC 3.5% (95%CI: 2.3–5.1) vs FAC 2.3% (95%CI: 1.4–3.7); Chi-square P=0.18 3 (0.4) 16 (2) 4 (1) San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Cumulative Incidence of CHF 0.08 TAC (n=744) FAC (n=736) 26 17 Reported in the first 55 months of follow-up 13 5 Reported in months 55 to 120 of follow-up 13 12 0.07 Number of CHF events Probability of CHF 0.06 0.05 0.04 TAC 0.03 FAC 0.02 0.01 0.00 0 12 Number at Risk 744 713 TAC 736 716 FAC 24 36 48 60 72 84 96 108 120 484 429 437 392 Time from randomization to CHF event (months) 679 672 647 621 620 588 591 554 566 522 540 490 515 466 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Changes in LVEF TAC (n=744) FAC (n=736) Nonevaluable patients, n 396 467 Evaluable patients, n 348 269 LVEF decrease >20%, n (% evaluable) 58 (17) 41 (15) LVEF Decrease below normal limit, 41 (12) 27 (10) n (% evaluable) *Evaluable patients had an LVEF assessment at baseline and during the study period. †Lower normal limit was 50% if normal limit was unknown. San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Hematologic Malignancies at 10 Years No. patients (%) Acute myeloid leukemia Chronic lymphocytic leukemia Myelodysplastic Syndrome TAC n=744 FAC n=736 4 (1) 1 (0.1) 0 1 (0.1) 2 (0.3) 1 (0.1) San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Serious Adverse Events • • • • SAEs occurred more frequently with TAC, but at lower rates during follow-up – treatment (TAC 36%; FAC 9%) – follow-up (TAC 7%; FAC 5%) During treatment, main AEs were hematologic – grade 3 or 4 neutropenia 66% TAC; 49% FAC – febrile neutropenia 25% TAC; 3% FAC Most common AEs persisting into follow-up period – asthenia (TAC 32%; FAC 24%) – amenorrhea (TAC 47%; FAC 30%) Rates of AEs starting or worsening during the follow-up period were similar except for peripheral sensory neuropathy (TAC 4%; FAC 1%) San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Efficacy Summary • The survival benefit of TAC over FAC is maintained at a median follow-up of 10 years – DFS 20% reduction in risk of relapse (P=0.0043) 10-year DFS rates: TAC 62%, FAC 55% – OS 26% reduction in risk of death (P=0.002) 10-year OS rates: TAC 76%, FAC 69% • TAC improves DFS irrespective of nodal, hormone receptor, or HER2/neu status San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Safety Summary • CHF was reported in 3.5% and 2.3% of patients treated with TAC and FAC, respectively (P=0.18) • Most CHF cases were grade 3 • CHF was fatal in 2 TAC patients and 4 FAC patients • Significant LVEF decreases (>20%) were similar between treatment groups (TAC 17%, FAC 15%) • Hematological malignancies were reported in 6 (0.8%) and 3 (0.4%) patients treated with TAC and FAC (P=0.51; Fisher’s exact test) San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Conclusions • The 10-year follow-up analysis confirms that adjuvant docetaxel combined with doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide (TAC) provides a long-term disease-free survival and overall survival benefit in the treatment of women with node-positive early breast cancer San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Acknowledgments • The women who participated in the study and those who returned for follow-up • The investigators and their staff • The Independent Data Monitoring Committee • The Study Co-Chairs (John Mackey, Charles Vogel) • The CIRG staff (Agathe Garcia, Matthieu Rupin) San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium - Cancer Therapy and Research Center at UT Health Science Center – December 8–12 2010 BCIRG 001 Investigators Canada Allan S, Chang J, Colwell B, Drolet Y, Dufresne J, Gelmon K, Holland D, Lesperance B, Laing K, Mackey J, Potvin C, Provencher L, Rubin S, Sami A, Sehdev S, Trudeau M, Verma S, Spadafora S, Whitlock P, Yelle L, Mackinnon J USA Avery B, Beck T, Begas A, George C, Glaspy J, Graham B, Hainsworth J, Iannotti N, Limentani S, Marcom K, Modiano M, O’Rourke M, Robert N, Schnell F, Theall K, Tongol J, Vogel C Spain Alba Conejo E, Alvarez Lopez I, Anton Torres A, Aranda Aguilar E, Cassinello J, Garcia Puche JL, Lobo Samper F, Lopez Lopez R, Lopez Vega JM, Martin M, Munarriz Gandia B, Murias Rosales A, Rodriguez Lescure A, Torres A Poland Karnicka-Mlodkowska H, Pienkowski T, Rolski J UK Coleman R, Price C, Sherwin E, Wardley A, Greece Georgoulias V Hungary Boer K, Juhos E, Pinter T Germany Oberhoff C France Guastalla JP So. Africa Moodley D Brazil Teixeira LC, Vinholes J Egypt Abd-El-Azim H, El-Zawahry H Sweden Fornander T, Nylen U Austria Schuller J Israel Lurie H, Merimsky O, Steiner M Czech Rep Abrahamova J, Finek J Argentina Martinez JL, Mickiewicz E, Orti R Portugal Chumbo M, Goncalves I Uruguay Viola A Slovak Rep Koza I