Wednesday 16 March 2022

 

A retrospective validation of CanAssist Breast in European early-stage breast cancer patient cohort

 

by Aparna Gunda, Chetana Basavaraj, Chandra Prakash Sv, Manjula Adinarayan, Ramu Kolli, Mallikarjuna Se, Cristina Saura, Fiorella Ruiz, Patricia Gomez, Vicente Peg, Jose Jimenez, Susanne Sprung, Heidi Fiegl, Christine Brunner, Daniel Egle, Bhattacharyya Gs, Manjiri Bakre 

 

The Breast: VOLUME 63, P1-8, JUNE 01, 2022

 

 CanAssist Breast (CAB), a prognostic test uses immunohistochemistry (IHC) approach coupled with artificial intelligence-based machine learning algorithm for prognosis of early-stage hormone-receptor positive, HER2/neu negative breast cancer patients. It was developed and validated in an Indian cohort. Here we report the first blinded validation of CAB in a multi-country European patient cohort. FFPE tumor samples from 864 patients were obtained from-Spain, Italy, Austria, and Germany. IHC was performed on these samples, followed by recurrence risk score prediction. The outcomes were obtained from medical records. The performance of CAB was analyzed by hazard ratios (HR) and Kaplan Meier curves. CAB stratified European cohort (n = 864) into distinct low- and high-risk groups for recurrence (P < 0.0001) with HR of 3.32 (1.85–5.93) like that of mixed (India, USA, and Europe) (n = 1974), 3.43 (2.34–4.93) and Indian cohort (n = 925), 3.09 (1.83–5.21). CAB provided significant prognostic information (P < 0.0001) in women aged ≤ 50 (HR: 4.42 (1.58–12.3), P < 0.0001) and >50 years (HR: 2.93 (1.44–5.96), P = 0.0002). CAB had an HR of 2.57 (1.26–5.26), P = 0.01) in women with N1 disease. CAB stratified significantly higher proportions (77%) as low-risk over IHC4 (55%) (P < 0.0001). Additionally, 82% of IHC4 intermediate-risk patients were stratified as low-risk by CAB. Accurate risk stratification of European patients by CAB coupled with its similar performance inIndian patients shows that CAB is robust and functions independent of ethnic differences. CAB can potentially prevent overtreatment in a greater number of patients compared to IHC4 demonstrating its usefulness for adjuvant systemic therapy planning in European breast cancer patients.