European Journal of Cancer
Volume 39, Issue 17 , Pages 2439-2449, November 2003

Clinical outcome of breast cancer patients with liver metastases alone in the anthracycline-taxane era: a retrospective analysis of two prospective, randomised metastatic breast cancer trials

  • G Atalay

      Affiliations

    • Institut Jules Bordet, Boulevard de Waterloo 125, 1000 Brussels, Belgium
  • ,
  • L Biganzoli

      Affiliations

    • Institut Jules Bordet, Boulevard de Waterloo 125, 1000 Brussels, Belgium
  • ,
  • F Renard

      Affiliations

    • Institut Jules Bordet, Boulevard de Waterloo 125, 1000 Brussels, Belgium
  • ,
  • R Paridaens

      Affiliations

    • Universitair Ziekenhuis Gasthuisberg, Herestraat 49, 3000 Leuven, Belgium
  • ,
  • T Cufer

      Affiliations

    • Institute of Oncology, Zaloska 2SL-1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia
  • ,
  • R Coleman

      Affiliations

    • Weston Park Hospital NHS Trust, Whitham Road, Sheffield, S10 2SJ, UK
  • ,
  • A.H Calvert

      Affiliations

    • Newcastle General Hospital, Westgate Road, Newcastle Upon Tyne, NE4 6BE, UK
  • ,
  • T Gamucci

      Affiliations

    • Ospedale SS Trinita, Località San Marciano 039 Saro, Italy
  • ,
  • A Minisini

      Affiliations

    • Institut Jules Bordet, Boulevard de Waterloo 125, 1000 Brussels, Belgium
  • ,
  • P Therasse

      Affiliations

    • EORTC Data Center, Av E Mounier 83, Brussels, Belgium
  • ,
  • M.J Piccart

      Affiliations

    • Institut Jules Bordet, Boulevard de Waterloo 125, 1000 Brussels, Belgium
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +32-2-541-3206; fax: +32-2-538-0858
  • ,
  • on behalf of the EORTC Breast Cancer and Early Clinical Studies Groups

Received 3 April 2003; accepted 4 April 2003.

Abstract 

Liver metastases have long been known to indicate an unfavourable disease course in breast cancer (BC). However, a small subset of patients with liver metastases alone who were treated with pre-taxane chemotherapy regimens was reported to have longer survival compared with patients with liver and metastases at other sites. In the present study, we examined the clinical outcome of breast cancer patients with liver metastases alone in the context of two phase III European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) trials which compared the efficacy of doxorubicin (A) versus paclitaxel (T) (trial 10923) and of AC (cyclophosphamide) versus AT (trial 10961), given as first-line chemotherapy in metastatic BC patients. The median follow-up for the patients with liver metastases was 90.5 months in trial 10923 and 56.6 months in trial 10961. Patients with liver metastases alone comprised 18% of all patients with liver metastases, in both the 10923 and 10961 trials. The median survival of patients with liver metastases alone and liver plus other sites of metastases were 22.7 and 14.2 months (log rank test, P=0.002) in trial 10923 and 27.1 and 16.8 months (log rank test, P=0.19) in trial 10961. The median TTP (time to progression) for patients with liver metastases alone was also longer compared with the liver plus other sites of metastases group in both trials: 10.2 versus 8.8 months (log rank test, P=0.02) in trial 10923 and 8.3 versus 6.7 months (log rank test, P=0.37) in trial 10961. Most patients with liver metastases alone have progression of their disease in their liver again (96 and 60% of patients in trials 10923 and 10961, respectively). Given the high prevalence of breast cancer, improved detection of liver metastases, encouraging survival achieved with currently available cytotoxic agents and the fact that a significant portion of patients with liver metastases alone have progression of their tumour in the liver again, a more aggressive multimodality treatment approach through prospective clinical trials seems worth exploring in this specific subset of women.

Keywords:  Breast cancer, Liver metastases

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PII: S0959-8049(03)00601-4

doi:10.1016/S0959-8049(03)00601-4

European Journal of Cancer
Volume 39, Issue 17 , Pages 2439-2449, November 2003