The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether tumour response to primary chemotherapy in human breast cancer is influenced by baseline haemoglobin (Hb) status. A total of 157 patients with T2-4, N0-1 M0 breast cancer were treated with chemotherapy consisting of either the CMF regimen + tamoxifen (the first 76 cases) or the single-agent epirubicin (the subsequent 81) before definitive surgery. In total, 144 patients were fully assessable. Ki67, p53, bcl-2, c-erbB2, steroid hormone receptor, and microvessel density were evaluated immunohistochemically in tumour specimens obtained before chemotherapy and at surgery. Tumour shrinkage > 50% occurred in 72.1% of patients. Responding patients had higher baseline Hb levels and red blood cell counts than nonresponders (P < 0.01 and < 0.003, respectively). The distribution of disease response according to increasing cutoffs of baseline Hb status showed that from 12.5 mg l-1 onwards, patients with Hb levels above the cutoff obtained a greater response rate than those with lower Hb values. The difference attained the statistical significance at 12.5 (76.1 vs 59.5%, P < 0.05) and 13.0 g/dl-1 (81.0 vs 57.6%, P < 0.002) cutoffs, respectively. The predictive role of Hb levels was maintained in multivariate analysis after adjustment for clinical and biological characteristics and treatment regimen. Patients with baseline Hb levels ≤ 13 g dl-1 showed a lower treatment-induced reduction in Ki67 expression (P < 0.04) and a higher Ki67 expression at postoperative evaluation (P < 0.02) than their counterparts. In conclusion, low Hb levels may negatively influence the response rate of chemotherapy in breast cancer patients. Inhibition of antiproliferative activity could be a possible mechanism. © 2003 Cancer Research UK.
CITATION STYLE
Bottini, A., Berruti, A., Brizzi, M. P., Bersiga, A., Generali, D., Allevi, G., … Dogliotti, L. (2003). Pretreatment haemoglobin levels significantly predict the tumour response to primary chemotherapy in human breast cancer. British Journal of Cancer, 89(6), 977–982. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6601216
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