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Altona Prognostic Index: A New Prognostic Index for ER-Positive and Her2-Negative Breast Cancer of No Special Type

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Breast cancer is the most common tumor-related cause of death in women in Europe and worldwide. The aim of our retrospective study, including 6654 women, was on the one hand to verify the validity of the worldwide known Nottingham prognostic index (NPI), and on the other hand to crea...

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Autores principales: Wegscheider, Anne-Sophie, Ulm, Bernhard, Friedrichs, Kay, Lindner, Christoph, Niendorf, Axel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8345191/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34359699
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13153799
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author Wegscheider, Anne-Sophie
Ulm, Bernhard
Friedrichs, Kay
Lindner, Christoph
Niendorf, Axel
author_facet Wegscheider, Anne-Sophie
Ulm, Bernhard
Friedrichs, Kay
Lindner, Christoph
Niendorf, Axel
author_sort Wegscheider, Anne-Sophie
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Breast cancer is the most common tumor-related cause of death in women in Europe and worldwide. The aim of our retrospective study, including 6654 women, was on the one hand to verify the validity of the worldwide known Nottingham prognostic index (NPI), and on the other hand to create a new model with even more prognostic validity. Our newly developed Altona prognostic index (API) shows significantly superior outcome in calculating progression free survival. In contrast to the NPI, the API considers characteristics such as subtypes of breast cancer, as this disease is heterogenous involving different entities, and patient’s age. Evaluating progression free survival in different subgroups, our study shows that both these prognostic indices should only be applied on a patient collective that is ≤70 years old with first primary, unifocal, unilateral breast cancer that is of no special type (NST), estrogen receptor-positive and Her2-negative to get valid prediction data. ABSTRACT: Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease representing a number of different histopathologic and molecular types which should be taken into consideration if prognostic or predictive models are to be developed. The aim of the present study was to demonstrate the validity of the long-known Nottingham prognostic index (NPI) in a large retrospective study (n = 6654 women with a first primary unilateral and unifocal invasive breast cancer diagnosed and treated between April 1996 and October 2018; median follow-up time of breast cancer cases was 15.5 years [14.9–16.8]) from a single pathological institution. Furthermore, it was intended to develop an even superior risk stratification model considering an additional variable, namely the patient’s age at the time of diagnosis. Heterogeneity of these cases was addressed by focusing on estrogen receptor-positive as well as Her2-negative cases and taking the WHO-defined different tumor types into account. Calculating progression free survival Cox-regression and CART-analysis revealed significantly superior iAUC as well as concordance values in comparison to the NPI based stratification, leading to an alternative, namely the Altona prognostic index (API). The importance of the histopathological tumor type was corroborated by the fact that when calculated separately and in contrast to the most frequent so-called “No Special Type” (NST) carcinomas, neither NPI nor API could show valid prognostic stratification.
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spelling pubmed-83451912021-08-07 Altona Prognostic Index: A New Prognostic Index for ER-Positive and Her2-Negative Breast Cancer of No Special Type Wegscheider, Anne-Sophie Ulm, Bernhard Friedrichs, Kay Lindner, Christoph Niendorf, Axel Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Breast cancer is the most common tumor-related cause of death in women in Europe and worldwide. The aim of our retrospective study, including 6654 women, was on the one hand to verify the validity of the worldwide known Nottingham prognostic index (NPI), and on the other hand to create a new model with even more prognostic validity. Our newly developed Altona prognostic index (API) shows significantly superior outcome in calculating progression free survival. In contrast to the NPI, the API considers characteristics such as subtypes of breast cancer, as this disease is heterogenous involving different entities, and patient’s age. Evaluating progression free survival in different subgroups, our study shows that both these prognostic indices should only be applied on a patient collective that is ≤70 years old with first primary, unifocal, unilateral breast cancer that is of no special type (NST), estrogen receptor-positive and Her2-negative to get valid prediction data. ABSTRACT: Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease representing a number of different histopathologic and molecular types which should be taken into consideration if prognostic or predictive models are to be developed. The aim of the present study was to demonstrate the validity of the long-known Nottingham prognostic index (NPI) in a large retrospective study (n = 6654 women with a first primary unilateral and unifocal invasive breast cancer diagnosed and treated between April 1996 and October 2018; median follow-up time of breast cancer cases was 15.5 years [14.9–16.8]) from a single pathological institution. Furthermore, it was intended to develop an even superior risk stratification model considering an additional variable, namely the patient’s age at the time of diagnosis. Heterogeneity of these cases was addressed by focusing on estrogen receptor-positive as well as Her2-negative cases and taking the WHO-defined different tumor types into account. Calculating progression free survival Cox-regression and CART-analysis revealed significantly superior iAUC as well as concordance values in comparison to the NPI based stratification, leading to an alternative, namely the Altona prognostic index (API). The importance of the histopathological tumor type was corroborated by the fact that when calculated separately and in contrast to the most frequent so-called “No Special Type” (NST) carcinomas, neither NPI nor API could show valid prognostic stratification. MDPI 2021-07-28 /pmc/articles/PMC8345191/ /pubmed/34359699 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13153799 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Wegscheider, Anne-Sophie
Ulm, Bernhard
Friedrichs, Kay
Lindner, Christoph
Niendorf, Axel
Altona Prognostic Index: A New Prognostic Index for ER-Positive and Her2-Negative Breast Cancer of No Special Type
title Altona Prognostic Index: A New Prognostic Index for ER-Positive and Her2-Negative Breast Cancer of No Special Type
title_full Altona Prognostic Index: A New Prognostic Index for ER-Positive and Her2-Negative Breast Cancer of No Special Type
title_fullStr Altona Prognostic Index: A New Prognostic Index for ER-Positive and Her2-Negative Breast Cancer of No Special Type
title_full_unstemmed Altona Prognostic Index: A New Prognostic Index for ER-Positive and Her2-Negative Breast Cancer of No Special Type
title_short Altona Prognostic Index: A New Prognostic Index for ER-Positive and Her2-Negative Breast Cancer of No Special Type
title_sort altona prognostic index: a new prognostic index for er-positive and her2-negative breast cancer of no special type
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8345191/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34359699
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13153799
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