Background The addition of adjuvant capecitabine to standard chemotherapy of early-stage triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) patients has improved survival in a few randomised trials and in meta-analyses. However, many patients did not benefit. We evaluated the
BRCA1-like DNA copy number signature, indicative of homologous recombination deficiency, as a predictive biomarker for capecitabine benefit in the TNBC subgroup of the FinXX trial.
Methods Early-stage TNBC patients were randomised between adjuvant capecitabine-containing (TX + CEX: capecitabine-docetaxel, followed by cyclophosphamide-epirubicin-capecitabine) and conventional chemotherapy (T + CEF: docetaxel, followed by cyclophosphamide-epirubicin-fluorouracil). Tumour
BRCA1-like status was determined on low-coverage, whole genome next-generation sequencing data using an established DNA comparative genomic hybridisation algorithm.
Results For 129/202 (63.9%) patients the
BRCA1-like status could be determined, mostly due to lack of tissue. During a median follow-up of 10.7 years, 35 recurrences and 32 deaths occurred. Addition of capecitabine appears to improve recurrence-free survival more among 61 (47.3%) patients with non-
BRCA1-like tumours (HR 0.23, 95% CI 0.08–0.70) compared to 68 (52.7%) patients with
BRCA1-like tumours (HR 0.66, 95% CI 0.24–1.81) (P-interaction = 0.17).
Conclusion Based on our data, patients with non-
BRCA1-like TNBC appear to benefit from the addition of capecitabine to adjuvant chemotherapy. Patients with
BRCA1-like TNBC may also benefit. Additional research is needed to define the subgroup within
BRCA1-like TNBC patients who may not benefit from adjuvant capecitabine.Subject terms:
Breast cancer, Translational research, Predictive markers, Breast cancer 相似文献