Oncotype DX results are in...

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  • hsant
    hsant Member Posts: 790
    edited July 2016

    Dara, 4 1/2 weeks seems awfully long for oncotype results. I was told it would take 2 weeks, but it ended up only taking one week. This was a year ago. The BRCA results took a lot longer. I think it was around 8 weeks before I got my results

  • DaraB
    DaraB Member Posts: 945
    edited July 2016

    Thanks, I'm wondering if they're in and they are just waiting for my appointment, but I couldn't get in to the MO until the 18th. I just emailed the surgeon and her nurse to request the results if they're in. It's City of Hope so you'd think they'd be more on top of things.

  • hsant
    hsant Member Posts: 790
    edited July 2016

    I was told my results over the phone from my BS, and my MO. I think it's good that you've inquired about this,because mistakes are made, even in the best facilities.

  • sensitivehrt
    sensitivehrt Member Posts: 359
    edited July 2016

    Hi all,

    I had created a separate post for myself the other evening but came across this tonight.  I got the call on Tues that my score is a 30 the high end of intermediate, and that we would be discussing chemo options.  Parts of my pathology changed though.  After biopsy/surgery I was told ER+ 8% and PR-.  MO states that I am now ER- put PR +. Said with Oncotype they don't give %, just positive or negative.  Anyone else have this happen. Not really looking forward to my appointment on Tues.

  • edwards750
    edwards750 Member Posts: 3,761
    edited July 2016

    My score was 11 five years ago. I had IDC, Grade 1 and have been taking Tamoxifen. My last ONC visit is next month. I'm wondering what the reasons are for lowering the scores other than random group surveys. According to my Oncotype results I have an 8% chance of recurrence.

    A lot of factors go into determining whether chemo is the treatment of choice. Had the scores been lowered back when I was tested I would still not have opted for chemo because I didn't have an aggressive BC.

    My BS told me I had a wimpy cancer whatever that really means. I did have 33 rounds of Rads which was a walk in the park compared to chemo.

    There is a radiologist in our support group at church. We meet every other month. Great group of ladies who try to help others who are DX with BC. We have lost one lady who had aggressive BC from the getgo and a litany of medical issues like diabetes and lung problems. The radiologist probably feels like she is at a press conference when she comes to our meetings because we inundate her with questions. She said the Oncotype test is a good barometer of your BC and oncologists are relying on it more and more to determine treatment.

    Recently one of the ladies who has ILC found out her cancer has metasized to her hips. She was stunned and so were we. Her tumor markers were up so her ONC did scans and found lesions scattered all over her hips. They had planned to do Rads but given they were not confined to one area opted for the chemo drug for life. Idk if she had the Oncotype test or not.

    We all know there are no guarantees. We all make the best choices for ourselves based on what we know and what we can tolerate. After all we all should have a decent quality of life regardless.

    Diane



  • Kechla
    Kechla Member Posts: 231
    edited July 2016

    I am currently in the same boat. Stage 1, grade 1, Er+ / pr-, her-. Oncotype 22. 45 years old. Not sure what to think... This is a recurrence for me and I'm also worried about very small margin so (.7mm, 1mm, and 1.5 mm).

  • DaraB
    DaraB Member Posts: 945
    edited July 2016

    Dr called last night with my results... onco 20. He laid out all the data, options, survival rates, etc. Doing chemo will only give me an added 2%-3% advantage 5 years out. Knowing what the chemo could possibly do long term, I'm really pretty sure I will pass on the chemo, especially since I'm on the low end of intermediate. Already made my consult appt with rads.

  • Moondust
    Moondust Member Posts: 510
    edited July 2016

    Sensitivehrt, the onco report shows a scale for the ER, PR, and HER2. If you get a copy of all the pages, you can see on the scale where you fall. It is just that under a certain number, they consider you negative. But you will be able to see if you are just under the line or way at the bottom. However, their scores are not percentages so don't try to correlate that. With a low ER score, you really need to think about chemo, because the hormonal pills are less effective for low ER or low PR. I had high Ki67, too, although that is on the pathology report, not the onco report. My MO would not even consider Ki67, but it has been used as an indicator for years.

    I was in a similar boat with a 26 score, and I decided to do the chemo, but I didn't decide until after the first few radation treatments, so I am having the chemo now, after my rads were done. Long story, but the second opinion (which my MO insisted I get) agreed with me that I would benefit. All who have to make a decision, please ask what they would recommend as your chemo treatment. I am getting TC x 4 and it has not been too bad so far. Today I had my third infusion and I'll have the fourth in another three weeks. Yes, the hair went, but #nohairdontcare. I have been walking every day and hiking on the weekends, although slower uphills and not quite as far as normal. If they want to add the A (adriamycin) to your treatment, it might be a little tougher, but a healthy diet and exercise will bring your blood counts up by the next treatment, and focusing on what you can do rather than what you can't do will help you get through, for all who decide to do chemo. I have to say, the time is flying by.

    Just for the record, if my score had been a 20 or 22 I would probably have decided against chemo. But 26 is in the "new high" range, although that is totally unofficial according to Genomic Health. With a 30 there would have been no question in my mind to do it.

  • sensitivehrt
    sensitivehrt Member Posts: 359
    edited July 2016

    Moondust thanks for your reply.  According to the oncotype score I am now ER negative at 5.9 the cutoff for positive is 6.5, and PR positive with a score a 5.7. the cutoff for positive is 5.5.  I have heard the new "cutoff" is 25 although not officially stated, and I do worry about being closer to a triple negative and tamoxifen not being as effective.  MO recommended TC x4 for me as well.  I would have to take time off work though, as I work with the elderly.  Right now I'm on a rollercoaster and have changed my mind day to day.  Still have a few days to decided.  Will take your points in to account.


    Thanks again,

    Brandi

  • DaraB
    DaraB Member Posts: 945
    edited July 2016

    sensitivert, can you tell me where you saw/heard the new cut offs for hormone receptors? I'm in the intermediate range onco, plus PR 20%. If I decide to go with chemo, my MO said I would also do TC X 4. Thanks for the info.

  • sensitivehrt
    sensitivehrt Member Posts: 359
    edited July 2016

    DaraB-  I've just seen a few women mention it on here, moondust, in the post above me being one of them. Don't think it's official though.

  • Lisey
    Lisey Member Posts: 1,053
    edited July 2016

    adding, the reason the magic 26 number gets thrown around is due to the Tailor study. It basically said 0-11 is no chemo and 26-up shows chemo helps.... but the study they don't have published is the intermediate study and where the no chemo / chemo magic number is. Somewhere between 11-25. That section of the study is due out in a few years or so I'm hearing...

  • BarredOwl
    BarredOwl Member Posts: 2,433
    edited July 2016

    DaraB:

    I've posted elsewhere and often on the standard ranges versus the test ranges of the TAILORx study in node-negative ("N0") patients.

    The standard ranges have not been changed. Because the TAILORx trial is on-going, the standard ranges are still in effect (RS low <18; intermediate 18 to 30; high ≥31).

    For the purposes of the TAILORx trial, because patients deemed intermediate risk would be assigned at random to receive either endocrine therapy alone or chemotherapy plus endocrine therapy, to minimize the potential for undertreatment, the definitions of low, intermediate, and high risk were slightly revised as compared with the standard ranges in use in clinical practice [citations omitted]. In my layperson's understanding, the revised ranges selected for the purposes of the trial are "investigational" until demonstrated otherwise:

    http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1510764...

    "To minimize the potential for undertreatment of the participants enrolled in our trial, the recurrence-score ranges used in our study differed from those that were originally defined as low (≤10 in our study vs. <18 in the original definition), intermediate (11 to 25 vs. 18 to 30), and high (≥26 vs. ≥31). The recurrence-score strata derived for the trial were based on prior studies that indicated that the risk of recurrence of breast cancer at a distant site at 10 years after diagnosis and a 5-year course of tamoxifen could be as high as 10% among patients with a score of 11 (point estimate, 7%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 5 to 10) and up to 20% among those with a score of 25 (point estimate, 16%; 95% CI, 13 to 20), indicating a risk that was substantial enough for a recommendation of adjuvant chemotherapy in patients with a score of 11 or higher."

    No results from the TAILORx trial for the groups scoring either 11 to 25 or 26 and above have been published as of this date, because the trial is on-going. Therefore, we are still awaiting TAILORx trial results for its "intermediate" and "high" risk groups, and the standard ranges are still in effect (<18; 18 to 30; ≥31).

    Nevertheless, patients with a Recurrence Score ("RS") of 26 to 30 should not hesitate to discuss the rationale for the TAILORx trial design with their Medical Oncologists to understand whether and how it should be viewed in the context of their individual situation, as it reflects considerations of the magnitude of recurrence risk associated with particular RSs on the high end of the standard intermediate range. The best anyone can do is to make an informed decision based on the evidence available at the time, in consultation with their medical oncologist.

    BarredOwl

  • DaraB
    DaraB Member Posts: 945
    edited July 2016

    Thanks. I'm in that intermediate gray group so still trying to weigh all options. Now waiting for another test Prosigna, similar to PAM50 and mammoprint.

  • BarredOwl
    BarredOwl Member Posts: 2,433
    edited July 2016

    Hi Dara:

    I just expanded the last paragraph of my post a tad.

    Best wishes to you on the additional tests and your decision-making.

    BarredOwl

  • sensitivehrt
    sensitivehrt Member Posts: 359
    edited July 2016

    Thanks BarredOwl and Lisey for jumping in. Dara I was in that high intermediate range at a 30. I just decided yesterday to do the chemo. Best of luck to you in your decision

  • BarredOwl
    BarredOwl Member Posts: 2,433
    edited July 2016

    By the way, regarding the actual published results of TAILORx, they included results only from those with Recurrence Scores of 0 to 10 (all node-negative ("N0"), who were assigned to receive endocrine therapy alone.

    Another prospective study (WGS Plan B) investigated and reported on those with Recurrence Scores of 0 to 11. I've discussed that study and its very different design elsewhere:

    https://community.breastcancer.org/forum/69/topics/842601?page=1#post_4680091

    https://community.breastcancer.org/forum/69/topics/842601?page=2#post_4691611

    BarredOwl


  • BarredOwl
    BarredOwl Member Posts: 2,433
    edited July 2016

    DaraB:

    You also asked about receptor status information provided by the Oncotype report. Be sure to obtain a copy of your original Oncotype report. See "Page 3 of 3" of your report for your individual Quantitative Single Gene Reports for ER, PR and HER2, and be sure to read the fine print and discuss any questions with your MO.

    This is an example from the Genomic Health website of what the ER information from a node-negative (N0) report looks like:

    image

    The individual "single-gene" reports for ER and PR (and HER2) were recently discussed in this thread, and the discussion goes on for many pages:

    https://community.breastcancer.org/forum/108/topics/845324?page=3#post_4748347

    BarredOwl


  • Lisey
    Lisey Member Posts: 1,053
    edited July 2016

    Barred, Here's a question for you.. (with obvious we're not doc disclaimers) They tested my biopsy, not my tumor for ER/PR.. so the numbers at my tagline are based on the IHC biopsy numbers. However, the OncotypeDX shows widely different percentages (me thinks).. but I can't figure out how to actually translate the Onco numbers into percentages. I've done some google digging and most say the IHC is more accurate. I asked my doc about the disparity and she blew off the oncotype numbers saying the IHC numbers were more important.

    Here's my numbers:

    IHC (from Biopsy)_OncotypeDX (from section)

    ER= 95% _______8.8 Positive (in the positive range it lands about here on the scale l__________Y______________________l - certainly doesn't look 95% to me.

    PR= 5% ________6.6 Positive (in the positive range it lands about here on the scale l_______Y_________________________l - looks more than 5% to me.


    So I'm now growing concerned that maybe I'm much less ER+ than I thought, which would mean that Oncotype score of 20 and Ki-67 of 30-35% is saying chemo is warranted moreso than I thought. I figured I'd just double down on the estogen blockers if the mammoprint is high, but if the ER is lower, then maybe I should reconsider the chemo. If the damn IHC was done on the tumor rather than the biopsy, I would feel better too.

  • BarredOwl
    BarredOwl Member Posts: 2,433
    edited July 2016

    Hi Lisey:

    We've actually discussed your specific Oncotype single-gene results before, here:

    https://community.breastcancer.org/forum/108/topics/845324?page=3#post_4748347

    However, in that thread, you provided different numbers for your Oncotype results:

    ER = 6.6

    PR = 6.6

    HER2 = 8.8

    Can you please confirm the actual numbers against the original report?

    Anyway, the single-gene score for ER and PR is not a percentage, and the results cannot be directly compared with the results of IHC.

    Usually, the validated pathology methods ("IHC") used to measure Estrogen Receptor protein and Progesterone Receptor protein look at whole cells. Results are reported as percent positive cells in a field of view (i.e., some cells are stained by a "molecular tag" and are seen as "positive for staining," and some cells are not stained). The percentage of cells that do stain is reported.

    Oncotype uses a completely different method ("qRT-PCR") to measure ER and PR mRNA from ground-up cells (obtained by microdissection I believe). It gives a numerical score in "units", where particular unit values falling below a specified positive/negative cut-off of X units are considered "negative" by Oncotype (if the arrow/triangle falls in the orange range at left).

    As you can see, IHC versus Oncotype use completely different analytical methods and sample cells in a different way. They measure different molecules: ER protein versus mRNA. The numerical outputs are reported in different "units" and cannot be directly compared: percent positive cells versus score in unit values. These methodological differences can lead to apparently differing degrees of positivity, which is very confusing for patients.

    I do not know off-hand how concordant IHC testing for ER and PR is when looking at IHC on biopsy versus IHC on surgical samples. You may want to inquire about that and/or research it. If you are concerned (or will be worrying) that there might be some difference between biopsy and surgical samples (e.g., due to possible tumor heterogeneity, sampling artifacts), you could seek an expert pathology review and possible further ER and PR testing (if they agree that it is indicated). I understand a number of places will conduct such a pathology review (if your state permits). For more information about this option, see this page (Pathology Opinions and Paragraph 4 of Treatment Opinions):

    http://www.breastcancer.org/treatment/second_opinion/where

    BarredOwl


  • Lisey
    Lisey Member Posts: 1,053
    edited July 2016

    I'm going to add to my thought here... looks like the Oncotype score for ER and PR is all over the map for the Percentages given by IHC. Apparently they match for Positive V. Negative around 95% of the time, and in the 5% that don't match, the Oncotype is usually the one that's wrong. If you look here... it shows that a lot of women had even LOWER oncotype scores and were still considered high ER+ by the IHC. Makes me feel helluva better to know that I shouldn't look at the Oncotype Score as a percentage of my ER. PLEASE someone correct me if I'm off base here. If I have a lower ER, I will do the damn Chemo. I'm banking on the high ER+ level that my doc told me to use.

    image

    image


    http://www.nature.com/modpathol/journal/v25/n6/full/modpathol2011219a.html

  • Lisey
    Lisey Member Posts: 1,053
    edited July 2016

    Barred, My ER was 8.8... I must have made a typo initially.

    ER = 8.8

    PR = 6.6

  • BarredOwl
    BarredOwl Member Posts: 2,433
    edited July 2016

    Hi Lisey:

    From the sample node-negative (N0) report on-line, single-gene ER scores greater than or equal to 6.5 units are considered positive by the Oncotype qRT-PCR method, and an ER score of 8.8 seems well within the positive range:

    ▼ (around 8.8)

    image


    As you know, the experimentally defined cut-off for positivity is different for each gene. The PR cut-off shown on the node-negative (N0) report is 5.5, and single-gene PR scores greater than or equal to 5.5 units are considered positive by the method:

    ▼ (around 6.6)

    image

    I note that according to the Discussion of the 2012 paper you just cited, they used biopsy samples for IHC and surgical samples for qRT-PCR:

    http://www.nature.com/modpathol/journal/v25/n6/full/modpathol2011219a.html

    "In our study, initial immunohistochemistry was performed on core biopsies, whereas resection specimens were used for the RT-PCR assay. Studies suggest high concordance between qualitative ER expression in core biopsies versus resection specimens.(24) However, there may be some variation in the level of expression between the two,(24) and this may have contributed to some initial discordance and less than perfect correlation coefficients."

    The Discussion notes a similarly high level of concordance between qRT-PCR and IHC found by Badve et al., but notes a difference (see bold):

    "In a similar study but using tissue microarray and different antibody clones, Badve et al (23) (in concert with Genomic Health) compared central immunohistochemistry for ER and PR with oncotype DX® qRT-pCR assay on 776 cases. For ER, the concordance between central immunohistochemistry and central RT-PCR was 93%. For PR, the concordance between central immunohistochemistry and central RT-PCR was 90%. In this study immunohistochemistry ER-negative cases that were RT-PCR positive were more common than immunohistochemistry ER-positive cases that were RT-PCR negative (unlike our study). However, in regards to PR, immunohistochemistry PR-negative cases that were RT-PCR positive were less common than immunohistochemistry PR-positive cases that were RT-PCR negative (similar to our study). The reasons for the difference between Badve et al study and our study include immunohistochemistry analysis on very small samples (ie tissue microarray), and possibly using less optimally fixed tissue and less sensitive antibodies by Badve et al. (23)"

    This is Reference 23, Badve et al. (2008), in case you are interested:

    http://jco.ascopubs.org/content/26/15/2473.full.pdf

    BarredOwl

  • MFalabella
    MFalabella Member Posts: 176
    edited July 2016

    HI all,, I am waiting for my oncotype too. I had lumpectomy 2 weeks ago and they got clean margins, but found minimates in SN. According to my SO the tumor board is recommending chemo for me because my tumor was large (5cm), I am only 44 and I had ER% 90 and PR% 40. SO told me that in her opinion that the results of the oncotype don't really matter all that much at this point. I will find out for sure when I see my MO on the 16th of this month.


    xoxoMichelle

  • Meow13
    Meow13 Member Posts: 4,859
    edited July 2016

    MFALABELLA, ask your doctor if you should have hormone therapy. I thought ilc responds better to that than chemo. Radiation sounds like a given but I would ask what benefit there is to chemo for your situation.

    Ilc is not as common.

  • Lisey
    Lisey Member Posts: 1,053
    edited July 2016

    MF, can you break down your grade as well?

  • voraciousreader
    voraciousreader Member Posts: 7,496
    edited July 2016

    lisey...in her signature ( below her comment) MF tells us that she is Grade2.

  • Lisey
    Lisey Member Posts: 1,053
    edited July 2016

    I know Voracious, but that's not broken down... I wanted to know what her Mitosis # was. The mammoprint came back and said I didn't need Chemo, even with the high (potentially false) ki#, and a gray level Oncotype. I'm considered low risk and my Oncologist has been insisting that for grade 2 tumors, you really need to focus on the Mitosis level.

  • DaraB
    DaraB Member Posts: 945
    edited July 2016

    Lisey, what is your mitosis number? I'm trying to find information re the numbers but am not seeing much other than the formulary.

  • Lisey
    Lisey Member Posts: 1,053
    edited July 2016

    My Mitosis number was a 1. My tubules were 3, and Nuclei 2 = 6 (Grade 2) Both Biopsy and Tumor confirmed Mitosis of 1.

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