Study of Preservation of Ovarian Reserve During Chemotherapy for Young Breast Cancer Patients
NCT ID: NCT02430103
Last Updated: 2024-12-12
Study Results
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Basic Information
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ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
349 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2015-12-25
2024-12-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Patients: Premenopausal patients aged 18-45 years were eligible for enrollment, with stages I to III of newly diagnosed breast cancer, for which treatment with adjuvant or neoadjuvant chemotherapy was planned. Exceptions were made up of the use of hormonal contraception, previous chemotherapy, bilateral oophorectomy or ovarian irradiation before enrollment, and GnRHa -containing endocrine therapy planned.
Study Design: In our study, patients will be informed comprehensively and assigned without interference to receive either (neo)adjuvant chemotherapy with goserelin (goserelin group) or without goserelin (chemotherapy group) as their own selection. AMH, follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), and estradiol (E2) are used as biochemical markers and AFC is used as biophysical marker. The markers and menstrual status will be evaluated before, during, and at 0.5-year, 1-year, 2-year after chemotherapy. Additionally, pregnancy and disease related outcomes within 5 years, assessed annually.
Patients in goserelin group are given a subcutaneously dose of 3.6 mg (Zoladex, AstraZeneca) at least 1 week before the first cycle of chemotherapy and then every 4 weeks for the duration of chemotherapy. Subgroup analysis is stratified by age (≤ 40 years and 41-45 years), baseline level of AMH(≤1ng/ml and \>1ng/ml), chemotherapy regimen (AC, AC-T(H), others) and endocrine therapy regimen (with or without Tamoxifen).
The primary end point is to compare the recovery rate of AMH value (≥ 0.5ng/ml) (according to the "the Bologna criteria") between the two treatment groups at 2-year after chemotherapy. Secondary endpoints included descriptions of the dynamic changes of each marker from pre- to post-chemotherapy and time to resumption of menstrual activity (reappearance of two consecutive menstrual periods within 21 to 35 days); recovery rate of AMH value at 1 year and the rates of the other markers returning to the premenopausal range (E2 ≥ 40 pg/ml, FSH \< 25 U/L, AFC ≥ 5) were assessed at both 1 year and 2 years. Additional end points included pregnancy and disease related outcomes within 5 years, assessed annually. Events in the analysis of disease-free survival (DFS) included local recurrence, distant metastases, contralateral or ipsilateral breast tumor, second primary malignancy, and death due to any cause. Events in the analysis of overall survival (OS) included deaths due to any cause. Explore whether patients with GnRH receptor or androgen receptor over-expression could benefit survival by subtype analysis.
Statistical Analysis: Sample size calculation was based on the GBG 37 ZORO study. Out of 60 patients, 17 were accessible for AMH assessment during follow up to estimate ovarian function in 24 months after end of chemotherapy. Out of these 17 patients, 8 received goserelin and 9 were treated without goserelin. Recovery to normal AMH level was seen in 3 of 9 (33%) patients in chemotherapy group vs 4 of 8 (50%) patients in goserelin group respectively. To have 80% power to detect a 17% improvement in recovery to normal AMH level in 2 years, with a two-sided type I error rate of 0.05, 230 patients were needed to be assigned (calculated by NCSS-PASS). Finally, considering dropping off of patients, the target enrollment was 240 eligible patients. Descriptive statistics of baseline demographics and clinicopathologic characteristics were considered in the two treatment groups.The recovery rates of ovarian reserve markers and menses at 1-year and 2-year follow-up after chemotherapy were compared by a Pearson chi-square test. Logistic regression was performed to study the effect of age, baseline level of AMH, chemotherapy regimen and tamoxifen possible interactions on the probability of ovarian recovery. The differences in the baseline clinicopathological characteristics between the two groups were adjusted through propensity score weighting. The propensity score for each patient was estimated by a logistic regression model using group (the chemotherapy group or the goserelin group) as dependent variable and all patient characteristics as independent variables. Next, adjusted recovery rates of these markers and menses were compared by the chi-square test. Hormone concentrations and AFC at each time point were compared using the Mann-Whitney test. Log-rank statistics was used to compare time to return of menses between the two groups. Finally, Kaplan-Meier curve for disease-free will be calculated and compared by log-rank test. P values less than 0.05 are considered statistically significant. Analyses are performed by using SPSS version 18 software.
In summary: our study is the first prospective cohort study that focus on the premenopausal breast cancer patients who would like to preserve the ovarian function in China. The results will be more adaptable in China and other countries in Asia where breast cancer patients' age at diagnosis is younger. The outcome of this study may offer breast cancer patients at reproductive age hope of becoming mothers and possessing vigour of youth.
Recent breast cancer treatment guidelines strongly recommended that moderate and high-risk young patients with hormone receptor-positive disease should receive ovarian function suppression as part of adjuvant endocrine therapy, based largely on the results of the SOFT and TEXT Trials. Consequently, more than 20% patients in the two treatment group in this study who had hormone receptor-positive disease were estimated to directly receive or to change from tamoxifen to a GnRHa-containing endocrine therapy regimen and would not be assessed at the 2-year follow-up after chemotherapy. Therefore, an interim statistical analysis was determined to perform on the eligible patients who could be evaluated at 1 year after chemotherapy in the two treatment groups. The cutoff date for this analysis was November 30, 2019.
Conditions
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Keywords
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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Chemotherapy plus GnRHa
Patients of the group will receive (neo)chemotherapy plus GnRHa ( Goserelin 3.6mg will be administered every 28 days by subcutaneous injection starting at least 7-14 days before the first cycle of chemotherapy and continued throughout chemotherapy duration).
Goserelin 3.6 MG
In goserelin group, goserelin 3.6mg will be administered every 28 days by subcutaneous injection starting at least 7-14 days before the first cycle of chemotherapy and continued throughout chemotherapy duration.
Chemotherapy
Patients of the group will receive (neo)chemotherapy merely.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Goserelin 3.6 MG
In goserelin group, goserelin 3.6mg will be administered every 28 days by subcutaneous injection starting at least 7-14 days before the first cycle of chemotherapy and continued throughout chemotherapy duration.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
1. Aged 45 years or younger
2. Have regular menstrual cycle
3. Newly diagnosed early-stage breast cancer (stages I to III)
4. Planned (neo)adjuvant chemotherapy
5. Signed informed consent document on file
Exclusion Criteria
1. Pregnancy or lactation
2. Oral contraceptives before enrollment
3. Prior chemotherapy
4. Bilateral oophorectomy or ovarian irradiation before enrollment
5. History of other cancers
6. GnRHa -containing adjuvant endocrine therapy
18 Years
45 Years
FEMALE
No
Sponsors
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Peking University People's Hospital
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Siyuan Wang
Nothing
Principal Investigators
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Shu Wang
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Peking University People's Hospital Breast Center
Locations
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Peking University People's Hospital
Beijing, Beijing Municipality, China
Countries
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References
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Wang S, Pei L, Hu T, Jia M, Wang S. Protective effect of goserelin on ovarian reserve during (neo)adjuvant chemotherapy in young breast cancer patients: a prospective cohort study in China. Hum Reprod. 2021 Mar 18;36(4):976-986. doi: 10.1093/humrep/deaa349.
Other Identifiers
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PKUPHBC-001
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id