Abstract
Abstract
Background
This study aimed to investigate the distribution and changes of HER2 status in untreated tumours, in residual disease and in metastasis, and their long-term prognostic implications.
Methods
This is a population-based cohort study of patients treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer during 2007–2020 in the Stockholm–Gotland region which comprises 25% of the entire Swedish population. Information was extracted from the National Breast Cancer Registry and electronic patient charts to minimize data missingness and misclassification.
Results
In total, 2494 patients received neoadjuvant chemotherapy, of which 2309 had available pretreatment HER2 status. Discordance rates were 29.9% between primary and residual disease (kappa = 0.534), 31.2% between primary tumour and metastasis (kappa = 0.512) and 33.3% between residual disease to metastasis (kappa = 0.483). Adjusted survival curves differed between primary HER2 0 and HER2-low disease (p < 0.001), with the former exhibiting an early peak in risk for death which eventually declined below the risk of HER2-low. Across all disease settings, increasing the number of biopsies increased the likelihood of detecting HER2-low status.
Conclusion
HER2 status changes during neoadjuvant chemotherapy and metastatic progression, and the long-term behaviours of HER2 0 and HER2-low disease differ, underscoring the need for obtaining tissue biopsies and for extended follow-up in breast cancer studies.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC