DCISionRT Test Appears Predictive of Benefit From Radiation Therapy DCIS of the Breast

Article

Findings from the SqeDCIS trial indicated that DCISionRT was predictive of radiotherapy benefit in patients with ductal carcinoma in situ of the breast.

Testing with DCISionRT appeared to predict the benefit of radiation in reducing 10-year local invasive breast cancer risk in patients with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) of the breast, according to a press release for the randomized SqeDCIS trial.1

The trial enrolled a total of 504 patients who had complete data and negative surgical margins. DCISionRT divided patients into either the elevated- (52%) or low-risk groups (48%).2 Patients with elevated-risk achieved a significantly decreased relative 10-year ipsilateral total recurrence (TotBE; HR, 0.32) and 10-year ipsilateral invasive recurrence (InvBE; HR, 0.24) rates following treatment with radio therapy. This translated to absolute decreases of 15.5% and 9.3% in each group, respectively. Notably, no significant risk differences were observed in the low-risk group following treatment with radiotherapy.

Investigators noted that findings from the trial are consistent with 3 previous studies assessing DCISionRT, which served to further validate the test as a potential strategy.

“In this study, DCISionRT demonstrated statistically significant radiation therapy benefit in patients with higher Decision Scores (DS), and minimal benefit in lower scores," principal investigator, Fredrik Wärnberg, MD, PhD, a professor in the Department of Surgery at the Institute of Clinical Sciences, Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Sweden, said in a press release. “This was a highly valuable use of bio-banked tissue from the landmark SweDCIS patient cohort as no other randomized studies have been able to identify DCIS patients who can omit RT.”

Additional findings from the study indicated that, when using a cut off of DS more than 3.0, the test did not appear to be predictive of a benefit from radiotherapy (P = .093). However, investigators noted that using a cut off of 2.8 revealed that radiotherapy benefit was higher in terms of InvBE interaction (P = .038). Per the DS 5 units, 10-year recurrence without radiotherapy was found to significantly increase (TotBE: HR, 1.5; InvBE: HR, 1.5). Moreover, continuous DS was found to be prognostic of TotBE risk, however categorical DS did not reach significance.

“We are thrilled to publish this latest data on DCISionRT, the only DCIS test validated with peer-reviewed published level 1b clinical evidence. The results confirm the power of the DCISionRT assay to predict radiotherapy benefit and enabling personalized treatment decisions,” Dan Forche, president and chief executive officer at PreludeDx, said in a press release. "The consistency of results with prior validation studies substantiates the robustness and reliable performance of DCISionRT. We believe these much-anticipated results will have a significant impact on clinical practice for DCIS patient management.”

References

  1. PreludeDx™ DCISionRT® predicts radiation benefit in landmark randomized SweDCIS clinical trial. News release. PreludeDx. December 7, 2021. Accessed December 9, 2021. https://prn.to/31IVD6f
  2. Wärnberg F, Karlsson P, Holmberg E, et al. Prognostic risk assessment and prediction of radiotherapy benefit for women with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) of the breast, in a randomized clinical trial (SweDCIS). Cancers. 2021;13(23):6103. doi:10.3390/cancers13236103
Recent Videos
Findings from David Rimm, MD, PhD, suggest that there may be an inverse relationship between HER2 and TROP2 expression among patients with breast cancer.
Tissue samples collected from patients with breast cancer during treatment may help explore therapy selection and predict toxicities.
Breast cancer care providers make it a goal to manage the adverse effects that patients with breast cancer experience to minimize the burden of treatment.
Social workers and case managers may have access to institutional- or hospital-level grants that can reduce financial toxicity for patients undergoing cancer therapy.
Thomas Hope, MD, believes that an NRC initiative to update infiltration guidelines may organically address concerns that H.R. 2541 outlines.
Insurance and distance to a tertiary cancer center were 2 barriers to receiving high-quality breast cancer care, according to Rachel Greenup, MD, MPH.
Thomas Hope, MD, had not observed an adverse effect attributable to an infiltration across more than a decade of administering nuclear agents at UCSF.
Antibody-drug conjugates are effective, but strategies such as better understanding the mechanisms of action may lead to enhanced care for patients with cancer. Antibody-drug conjugates are effective, but strategies such as better understanding the mechanisms of action may lead to enhanced care for patients with cancer.
Although 1 of 21 patients with liver-dominant NETs died due to RILD in the phase 1 study, no RILD-induced deaths were observed in the phase 2 trial.
Related Content