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Breast Cancer Outcomes, Gene Expression Profiling Tests

Full Title: Impact of Gene Expression Profiling Tests on Breast Cancer Outcomes

January 2008

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Structured Abstract

Objective: To assess the evidence that three marketed gene expression-based assays improve prognostic accuracy, treatment choice, and health outcomes in women diagnosed with early stage breast cancer.

Data Sources: MEDLINE®, EMBASE, the Cochrane databases, test manufacturer Web sites, and information provided by manufacturers.

Review Methods: We evaluated the evidence for three gene expression assays on the market; Oncotype DX™, MammaPrint® and the Breast Cancer Profiling (BCP or H/I ratio) test, and for gene expression signatures underlying the assays. We sought evidence on:

  1. Analytic performance of tests.
  2. Clinical validity (i.e., prognostic accuracy and discrimination).
  3. Clinical utility (i.e., prediction of treatment benefit).
  4. Harms.
  5. Impact on clinical decisionmaking and health care costs.

Results: Few papers were found on the analytic validity of the Oncotype DX and MammaPrint tests, but these showed reasonable within-laboratory replicability. Pre-analytic issues related to sample storage and preparation may play a larger role than within-laboratory variation. For clinical validity, studies differed according to whether they examined the actual test that is currently being offered to patients or the underlying gene signature.

Almost all of the Oncotype DX evidence was for the marketed test, the strongest validation study being from one arm of a randomized controlled trial (NSABP-14) with a clinically homogeneous population. This study showed that the test, added in a clinically meaningful manner to standard prognostic indices.

The MammaPrint signature and test itself was examined in studies with clinically heterogeneous populations (e.g., mix of ER positivity and tamoxifen treatment) and showed a clinically relevant separation of patients into risk categories, but it was not clear exactly how many predictions would be shifted across decision thresholds if this were used in combination with traditional indices.

The BCP test itself was examined in one study, and the signature was tested in a variety of formulations in several studies. One randomized controlled trial provided high quality retrospective evidence of the clinical utility of Oncotype DX to predict chemotherapy treatment benefit, but evidence for clinical utility was not found for MammaPrint or the H/I ratio. Three decision analyses examined the cost-effectiveness of breast cancer gene expression assays, and overall were inconclusive.

Conclusions: Oncotype DX is furthest along the validation pathway, with strong retrospective evidence that it predicts distant spread and chemotherapy benefit to a clinically relevant extent over standard predictors, in a well-defined clinical subgroup with clear treatment implications. The evidence for clinical implications of using MammaPrint was not as clear as with Oncotype DX, and the ability to predict chemotherapy benefit does not yet exist. The H/I ratio test requires further validation. For all tests, the relationship of predicted to observed risk in different populations still needs further study, as does their incremental contribution, optimal implementation, and relevance to patients on current therapies.


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Impact of Gene Expression Profiling Tests on Breast Cancer Outcomes

Evidence-based Practice Center: The Johns Hopkins University
Topic Nominators: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Current as of January 2008


Internet Citation:

Impact of Gene Expression Profiling Tests on Breast Cancer Outcomes, Structured Abstract. January 2008. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/tp/brcgenetp.htm


 

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