P-glycoprotein: the intermediate end point of drug response to induction chemotherapy in locally advanced breast cancer

HC Chung, SY Rha, JH Kim, JK Roh, JS Min… - Breast cancer research …, 1997 - Springer
HC Chung, SY Rha, JH Kim, JK Roh, JS Min, KS Lee, BS Kim, KB Lee
Breast cancer research and treatment, 1997Springer
Expression and clinical relevance of p-glycoprotein (p-gp) were evaluated in 31 cases of
locally advanced breast cancer and 9 cases involving inflammatory breast cancer after
induction chemotherapy. The de novo p-gp expression rate was 26% and increased up to
58%(p= 0.03) with the FAC (5-fluorouracil, adriamycin, cyclophosphamide) regimen.
Although more clinically complete responders were found in the secondary p-gp negative
group (p= 0.02), this difference was not found in pathological tumor response. Moreover, as …
Abstract
Expression and clinical relevance of p-glycoprotein (p-gp) were evaluated in 31 cases of locally advanced breast cancer and 9 cases involving inflammatory breast cancer after induction chemotherapy. The de novo p-gp expression rate was 26% and increased up to 58% (p = 0.03) with the FAC (5-fluorouracil, adriamycin, cyclophosphamide) regimen. Although more clinically complete responders were found in the secondary p-gp negative group (p = 0.02), this difference was not found in pathological tumor response. Moreover, as the grade of the secondary p-gp expression increased, the chemotherapeutic effect decreased, suggesting an inverse relationship between p-gp expression and drug effect (p = 0.04). When we subgrouped the patients into 4 groups using these two parameters, p-gp negative patients presenting with a high drug effect showed a low recurrence rate (p = 0.05) and marginal survival benefits (p = 0.09) as opposed to patients with a low drug effect. But in p-gp positive groups, the recurrence rate was the same between the two groups regardless of the drug effect. Thus, in the p-gp negative patient with a high drug effect, adjuvant chemotherapy with the same regimen as induction chemotherapy may induce more prognostically favorable results. Therefore, clinical application of the secondary p-gp detection can be used as an intermediate endpoint in evaluating drug response for an induction regimen.
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