Litcius/Paper detail

Clinical Utility of Multigene Profiling Assays in Early-Stage Invasive Breast Cancer: An Ontario Health (Cancer Care Ontario) Clinical Practice Guideline

Phillip Blanchette, Duvaraga Sivajohanathan, John M.S. Bartlett, Andrea Eisen, Harriet Feilotter, Rossanna C. Pezo, Gulisa Turashvili, Phillip Williams

2022Current Oncology15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this guideline is to determine the clinical utility of multigene profiling assays in individuals with early-stage invasive breast cancer. METHODS: This guideline was developed by Ontario Health (Cancer Care Ontario)'s Program in Evidence-Based Care (PEBC) through a systematic review of relevant literature, patient- and caregiver-specific consultation and internal and external reviews. Recommendation 1: In patients with early-stage estrogen receptor (ER)-positive/human epidermal growth factor 2 (HER2)-negative breast cancer, clinicians should consider using multigene profiling assays (i.e., Oncotype DX, MammaPrint, Prosigna, EndoPredict, and the Breast Cancer Index) to help guide the use of systemic therapy. Recommendation 2: In patients with early-stage node-negative ER-positive/HER2-negative disease, clinicians may use a low-risk result from Oncotype DX, MammaPrint, Prosigna, EndoPredict/EPclin, or Breast Cancer Index assays to support a decision not to use adjuvant chemotherapy. Recommendation 3: In patients with node-negative ER-positive/HER2-negative disease, clinicians may use a high-risk result from Oncotype DX to support a decision to offer chemotherapy. A high Oncotype DX recurrence score is capable of predicting adjuvant chemotherapy benefit. Recommendation 4: In postmenopausal patients with ER-positive/HER2-negative tumours and one to three nodes involved (N1a disease), clinicians may withhold chemotherapy based on a low-risk Oncotype DX or MammaPrint score if the decision is supported by other clinical, pathological, or patient-related factors. Recommendation 5: The evidence to support the use of molecular profiling to select the duration of endocrine therapy is evolving. In patients with ER-positive disease, clinicians may consider using a Breast Cancer Index (H/I) high assay result to support a decision to extend adjuvant endocrine therapy if the decision is supported by other clinical, pathological, or patient-related factors.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineGuidelineBreast cancerClinical PracticeProfiling (computer programming)OncologyStage (stratigraphy)Health careCancerBioinformaticsGynecologyInternal medicineFamily medicinePathologyBiologyEconomic growthPaleontologyOperating systemEconomicsComputer scienceBreast Cancer Treatment StudiesBRCA gene mutations in cancerCancer Genomics and Diagnostics