Hypothesis needs further testing
Invited discussant Lori Pierce, MD, a radiation oncologist with Michigan Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, said it’s unclear whether TMEM doorway density changed following neoadjuvant chemotherapy as there were no prechemotherapy scores available in this study.
“But I think the key part is that, if we think neoadjuvant chemotherapy promotes metastasis, then there should be an inferior outcome compared to adjuvant chemotherapy, but that’s not what we see. Well-powered randomized trials show equivalent outcomes with neoadjuvant chemotherapy as well as adjuvant,” she said.
She noted that a 2018 meta-analysis of individual patient data from 10 randomized trials comparing neoadjuvant with adjuvant chemotherapy in early breast cancer showed no differences in long-term distant recurrences, breast cancer–specific mortality, or all-cause mortality between the two modalities.
“While I think these data are very provocative, I certainly wouldn’t want Black women or any women who need neoadjuvant therapy to be discouraged because of these data. We need these data to be tested rigorously, so I look forward to the clinical trials that will test this question and can really give us more information about this very interesting hypothesis,” Dr. Pierce said.
The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health, New York State Department of Health Peter T. Rowley Breast Cancer Scientific Research Projects, Helen & Irving Spatz Family Foundation, Evelyn Gruss Lipper Charitable Foundation, and the Gruss-Lipper Biophotonics Center and the integrated imaging program at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine. Dr. Oktay reported no conflicts of interests.