Impact of vitamin D on pathological complete response and survival following neoadjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer: a retrospective study.

Abstract

Background

There has been interest in the potential benefit of vitamin D (VD) to improve breast cancer outcomes. Pre-clinical studies suggest VD enhances chemotherapy-induced cell death. Vitamin D deficiency was associated with not attaining a pathologic complete response (pCR) following neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) for operable breast cancer. We report the impact of VD on pCR and survival in an expanded cohort.

Methods

Patients from Iowa and Montpellier registries who had serum VD level measured before or during NAC were included. Vitamin D deficiency was defined as < 20 ng/mL. Pathological complete response was defined as no residual invasive disease in the breast and lymph nodes. Survival was defined from the date of diagnosis to the date of relapse (PFS) or date of death (OS).

Results

The study included 327 women. Vitamin D deficiency was associated with the odds of not attaining pCR (p = 0.04). Fifty-four patients relapsed and 52 patients died. In multivariate analysis, stage III disease, triple-negative (TN) subtype and the inability to achieve pCR were independently associated with inferior survival. Vitamin D deficiency was not significantly associated with survival in the overall sample; however a trend was seen in the TN (5-years PFS 60.4% vs. 72.3%, p = 0.3), and in the hormone receptor positive /human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 negative (HER2-) subgroups (5-years PFS 89% vs 78%, p = 0.056).

Conclusion

Vitamin D deficiency is associated with the inability to reach pCR in breast cancer patients undergoing NAC.

Department

Description

Provenance

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1186/s12885-018-4686-x

Publication Info

Viala, Marie, Akiko Chiba, Simon Thezenas, Laure Delmond, Pierre-Jean Lamy, Sarah L Mott, Mary C Schroeder, Alexandra Thomas, et al. (2018). Impact of vitamin D on pathological complete response and survival following neoadjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer: a retrospective study. BMC cancer, 18(1). p. 770. 10.1186/s12885-018-4686-x Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/31498.

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Scholars@Duke

Chiba

Akiko Chiba

Associate Professor of Surgery

Dr. Akiko Chiba is an Associate Professor of Surgery at Duke University Medical Center and Associate Program Director of Duke Breast Surgery Fellowship Program. She is a breast surgical oncologist who cares for patients with breast cancer, benign breast diseases and those with an increased risk of breast cancer. Her clinical interests include young patients with breast cancer, genetic mutation carriers, and de-escalation of surgical treatment after neoadjuvant therapies. She is also studying the role of microbiome in breast cancer and how modulation of microbiome could be used to improve patient outcome. 

In addition to her role at Duke Cancer Institute, Dr. Chiba serve as an advisory board member of Breast and Gyn Oncology System of Excellence with National Oncology Program Office, Veterans Health Administration. This is a national program to improve care for breast and gynecologic cancer of veterans. She is also the lead physician for National Teleoncology High Risk Breast Cancer Clinic. On the national level, she serves on the Breast Committee for Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology, Co-Chair of Editorial Committee for Association of Women Surgeons, and Vice-Chair of Member Engagement Committee for American Society of Breast Surgeons.

Thomas

Alexandra Thomas

Professor of Medicine

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