"The PAM50 risk of recurrence score and the Breast Cancer Index may be used to identify estrogen receptor–positive breast cancer patients who are at increased risk of late recurrence and who may benefit from extended adjuvant hormonal therapy beyond 5 years," she concluded. But "none of these scores were developed to dictate treatment," she cautioned.
These findings, together with the PAM50 analysis from the ABCSG 8 study, solidify PAM50’s position as a validated prognostic tool, Dr. Gnant said.
In addition to PAM50 and the Breast Cancer Index, a third genetic test recently shown effective for predicting long-term recurrence risk in similar patients is the EndoPredict (Ann. Oncol. 2013;24:640-7).
All three assays can now be considered validated for longer-term prognosis in patients with endocrine-responsive, lymph node–negative breast cancer, Dr. Symmans said.
The conference was sponsored by the European Society for Medical Oncology.
Dr. Gnant disclosed ties to Amgen, Pfizer, Novartis, GlaxoSmithKline, Bayer, Sandoz, AstraZeneca, Genomic Health, NanoString Technologies, Sanofi-Aventis, and Roche. Dr. Sestak had no disclosures. Dr. Symmans is cofounder of, and has equity in, Nuvera Biosciences. Dr. Dubsky disclosed ties to AstraZeneca, Novartis, Sividon Diagnostica, and Pfizer.
Twitter: @mitchelzoler