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Bridging pre-surgical endocrine therapy for breast cancer during the COVID-19 pandemic: outcomes from the B-MaP-C study

Bridging pre-surgical endocrine therapy for breast cancer during the COVID-19 pandemic: outcomes from the B-MaP-C study
Bridging pre-surgical endocrine therapy for breast cancer during the COVID-19 pandemic: outcomes from the B-MaP-C study
Purpose: The B-MaP-C study investigated changes to breast cancer care that were necessitated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Here we present a follow-up analysis of those patients commenced on bridging endocrine therapy (BrET), whilst they were awaiting surgery due to reprioritisation of resources. Methods: This multicentre, multinational cohort study recruited 6045 patients from the UK, Spain and Portugal during the peak pandemic period (Feb–July 2020). Patients on BrET were followed up to investigate the duration of, and response to, BrET. This included changes in tumour size to reflect downstaging potential, and changes in cellular proliferation (Ki67), as a marker of prognosis. Results: 1094 patients were prescribed BrET, over a median period of 53 days (IQR 32–81 days). The majority of patients (95.6%) had strong ER expression (Allred score 7–8/8). Very few patients required expedited surgery, due to lack of response (1.2%) or due to lack of tolerance/compliance (0.8%). There were small reductions in median tumour size after 3 months’ treatment duration; median of 4 mm [IQR − 20, 4]. In a small subset of patients (n = 47), a drop in cellular proliferation (Ki67) occurred in 26 patients (55%), from high (Ki67 ≥ 10%) to low (< 10%), with at least one month’s duration of BrET. Discussion: This study describes real-world usage of pre-operative endocrine therapy as necessitated by the pandemic. BrET was found to be tolerable and safe. The data support short-term (≤ 3 months) usage of pre-operative endocrine therapy. Longer-term use should be investigated in future trials.
Breast cancer, Bridging endocrine therapy, COVID-19, Neoadjuvant endocrine therapy
0167-6806
265-279
Dave, Rajiv V
22df1585-58e5-4455-9d6d-9ce20e337fb0
Elsberger, Beatrix
287c77ab-b7a6-48bb-8ba3-1a2c2ceed040
Taxiarchi, Vicky P
5afd8cad-3873-4a11-8c3f-4b836c3ea3fa
Gandhi, Ashu
d3b4a939-07b4-4145-ac14-0e6003c7ff40
Kirwan, Cliona C
4a465729-935f-422b-99c6-8d5302271ab8
Kim, Baek
13d35bff-7782-419b-aed2-ccd3f956ea22
Camacho, Elizabeth M
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Coles, Charlotte E
a57ae239-eac4-496f-96f4-367ad6f35350
Copson, Ellen
a94cdbd6-f6e2-429d-a7c0-462c7da0e92b
Courtney, Alona
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Fairbrother, Patricia
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Horgan, Kieran
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Holcombe, Chris
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Kirkham, Jamie J
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Leff, Daniel R
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McIntosh, Stuart A
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O'Connell, Rachel
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Pardo, Ricardo
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Potter, Shelley
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Rattay, Tim
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Sharma, Nisha
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Vidya, Raghavan
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Cutress, Ramsey I
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B-MaP-C study collaborative
Dave, Rajiv V
22df1585-58e5-4455-9d6d-9ce20e337fb0
Elsberger, Beatrix
287c77ab-b7a6-48bb-8ba3-1a2c2ceed040
Taxiarchi, Vicky P
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Gandhi, Ashu
d3b4a939-07b4-4145-ac14-0e6003c7ff40
Kirwan, Cliona C
4a465729-935f-422b-99c6-8d5302271ab8
Kim, Baek
13d35bff-7782-419b-aed2-ccd3f956ea22
Camacho, Elizabeth M
18e274b9-3f32-4634-afb8-b8381b166aa6
Coles, Charlotte E
a57ae239-eac4-496f-96f4-367ad6f35350
Copson, Ellen
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Courtney, Alona
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Fairbrother, Patricia
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Horgan, Kieran
283eba25-003e-41f3-bc35-eb52112805eb
Holcombe, Chris
f9196a8b-3f04-49cf-aa7b-e0a3e02caa57
Kirkham, Jamie J
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Leff, Daniel R
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McIntosh, Stuart A
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O'Connell, Rachel
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Pardo, Ricardo
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Potter, Shelley
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Rattay, Tim
0ff56298-6769-44bf-8a22-a1620486e256
Sharma, Nisha
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Vidya, Raghavan
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Cutress, Ramsey I
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Dave, Rajiv V, Elsberger, Beatrix, Taxiarchi, Vicky P, Copson, Ellen and Cutress, Ramsey I , B-MaP-C study collaborative (2023) Bridging pre-surgical endocrine therapy for breast cancer during the COVID-19 pandemic: outcomes from the B-MaP-C study. Breast Cancer Research and Treatment, 199 (2), 265-279. (doi:10.1007/s10549-023-06893-4).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Purpose: The B-MaP-C study investigated changes to breast cancer care that were necessitated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Here we present a follow-up analysis of those patients commenced on bridging endocrine therapy (BrET), whilst they were awaiting surgery due to reprioritisation of resources. Methods: This multicentre, multinational cohort study recruited 6045 patients from the UK, Spain and Portugal during the peak pandemic period (Feb–July 2020). Patients on BrET were followed up to investigate the duration of, and response to, BrET. This included changes in tumour size to reflect downstaging potential, and changes in cellular proliferation (Ki67), as a marker of prognosis. Results: 1094 patients were prescribed BrET, over a median period of 53 days (IQR 32–81 days). The majority of patients (95.6%) had strong ER expression (Allred score 7–8/8). Very few patients required expedited surgery, due to lack of response (1.2%) or due to lack of tolerance/compliance (0.8%). There were small reductions in median tumour size after 3 months’ treatment duration; median of 4 mm [IQR − 20, 4]. In a small subset of patients (n = 47), a drop in cellular proliferation (Ki67) occurred in 26 patients (55%), from high (Ki67 ≥ 10%) to low (< 10%), with at least one month’s duration of BrET. Discussion: This study describes real-world usage of pre-operative endocrine therapy as necessitated by the pandemic. BrET was found to be tolerable and safe. The data support short-term (≤ 3 months) usage of pre-operative endocrine therapy. Longer-term use should be investigated in future trials.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 3 April 2023
Published date: 1 June 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: Baek Kim, Alona Courtney, Rachel O’Connell, Vicky P Taxiarchi, Raghavan Vidya, Jamie J Kirkham, Patricia Fairbrother, Nisha Sharma, Christopher W.J. Cartlidge, Kieran Horgan, Shelley Potter, Ashu Gandhi, Stuart A McIntosh, Elizabeth Camacho, Daniel R Leff and Chris Holcombe have nothing to declare. Rajiv V Dave (RVD) has received honoraria from Roche and support from Endomag. Dr Tim Rattay (TR) is currently an NIHR Clinical Lecturer. Charlotte E Coles (CEC) is supported by the National Institute Health Research Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre. Ramsey I Cutress (RIC) has equipment provided by Seca to analyse body composition to University Hospital Southampton as part of a NIHR model industry collaborative agreement (MiCA). This equipment is used in an Academic Investigator led charity funded study of which Ramsey Cutress is CI. Ellen Copson (EC) declares honoraria from: Roche, Pfizer, Astra-Zeneca, Lilly, Nanostring and expert panel work for World Cancer Research Fund. Cliona C Kirwan (CCK) is Royal College of Surgeons/University of Manchester Professor of Surgical trials funded by a Royal College of Surgeons of England / Masonic Charitable Foundation professorship. Publisher Copyright: © 2023, The Author(s).
Keywords: Breast cancer, Bridging endocrine therapy, COVID-19, Neoadjuvant endocrine therapy

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 478623
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478623
ISSN: 0167-6806
PURE UUID: 418a3425-c4c2-4bf0-8ccd-32b1b955a00f

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Date deposited: 05 Jul 2023 17:36
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:41

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Contributors

Author: Rajiv V Dave
Author: Beatrix Elsberger
Author: Vicky P Taxiarchi
Author: Ashu Gandhi
Author: Cliona C Kirwan
Author: Baek Kim
Author: Elizabeth M Camacho
Author: Charlotte E Coles
Author: Ellen Copson
Author: Alona Courtney
Author: Patricia Fairbrother
Author: Kieran Horgan
Author: Chris Holcombe
Author: Jamie J Kirkham
Author: Daniel R Leff
Author: Stuart A McIntosh
Author: Rachel O'Connell
Author: Ricardo Pardo
Author: Shelley Potter
Author: Tim Rattay
Author: Nisha Sharma
Author: Raghavan Vidya
Corporate Author: B-MaP-C study collaborative

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