DE-ESCALATION OF CHEMOTHERAPY IN ELDERLY WOMEN USING A 70-GENE PLATFORM – COMPARISON OF THE MINDACT STUDY WITH A REAL-WORLD STUDY IN THE BRAZILIAN POPULATION (AGEMA-BRA)

Authors

  • Fabio Postiglione Mansani Universidade Estadual de Ponta Grossa – Ponta Grossa (PR), Brazil.
  • Vitória Rossetim Celinski Universidade Estadual de Ponta Grossa – Ponta Grossa (PR), Brazil.
  • Ruffo de Freitas Junior Universidade Federal de Goiás – Goiânia (GO), Brazil.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29289/259453942022V32S2005

Keywords:

Breast cancer treatment, Genetic testing, Aged

Abstract

Introduction: Breast cancer is the most common malignant neoplasm in women, except for non-melanoma skin tumors,
and the population pyramid demonstrates an aging trend in most countries; it is necessary to value the analysis of the therapies used in this population, but elderly, seeking the de-escalation of treatment, mainly reducing the use of chemotherapy
drugs. In this context, the application of genetic signatures contributes to determine a less toxic treatment in these women
with luminal biological profile tumors, where toxicity is less tolerated and with a higher risk of fatal outcomes by therapy.
The MINDACT study evaluated this population using MammaPrint™, but patients over 70 years of age were poorly represented, corresponding only to 0.8% of the patients evaluated (56 of 6693 patients), and only 26 patients with high clinical
risk. Objective: The aim of this study was to verify the possibility of de-escalation of systemic treatment with the use of
MammaPrint™ genetic signature in elderly women by comparing the prevalence of data from the MINDACT study population with a cohort of Brazilian patients submitted to the examination (AGEMA-BRA). Methods: This is a cross-sectional
study comparing the prevalence of low- and high-risk genomic patients in a population with luminal profile breast carcinoma with high clinical risk in MINDACT study populations with a Brazilian cohort older than 70 years, evaluated by the
genetic signature MammaPrint™, between 2016 and 2020. This study describes the analysis of data with the estimation of
simple and relative frequencies of variables in relation to low- and high-risk classification and study populations (AGEMABRA and MINDACT). Then, the chi-square test was used to verify the differences between the proportions. To measure
the intensity of differences/associations, relative risks (RRs) and their 95% confidence intervals were calculated. The tests
were considered significant when p<0.05. Results: From a database of 950 patients submitted to MammaPrint™ analysis
from 2016 to 2020, 7 were excluded due to incomplete data. The population over 70 years (71–84 years) at the time of diagnosis was represented by 89 patients (9.4%), all with high clinical risk. Of these patients, 54 (60.7%) corresponded to low
genomic risk and 35 (39.3%) at high genomic risk. The comparative analysis between the prevalence of the Brazilian population and the MINDACT study, in which the low genomic risk was 61.5% and the high genomic risk was 38.5%, showed
no statistical significance (RR 0.98 (0.69–1.39), p=0.936). Conclusion: The comparative analysis of the prevalence among
the results of MammaPrint™ in the MINDACT study and in a cohort of Brazilian women (AGEMA-BRA) in the population older than 70 years showed no statistical difference. With the confirmation of MINDACT data in this age group in a
threefold larger cohort (AGEMA-BRA), it is inferable that, although the low representativeness in the studies, the genetic
signature of MammaPrint™ can be applied in the elderly women. The evaluation of outcomes regarding relapse-free survival and overall survival, an ongoing study, is necessary to confirm the data obtained.

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Published

2026-04-01

How to Cite

Mansani, F. P., Celinski, V. R., & Freitas Junior, R. de. (2026). DE-ESCALATION OF CHEMOTHERAPY IN ELDERLY WOMEN USING A 70-GENE PLATFORM – COMPARISON OF THE MINDACT STUDY WITH A REAL-WORLD STUDY IN THE BRAZILIAN POPULATION (AGEMA-BRA). Mastology, 32(suppl.2). https://doi.org/10.29289/259453942022V32S2005

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Section

Oral Presentation