Identification of racial disparities across MammaPrint and BluePrint subtypes in HR + HER2- breast cancer.

  • Post category:Breast Cancer
  • Reading time:2 mins read

Journal: NPJ breast cancer

Study population and design

  • Retrospective analysis: 1018 women with HR+/HER2– early-stage breast cancer from two registries (BEST and FLEX).
  • Matching: 509 Black women were propensity score–matched 1:1 to 509 White women by age and/or menopausal status.
  • Genomic testing: All underwent MammaPrint (risk: High vs Low) and BluePrint (molecular subtype: Luminal A-Type, Luminal B-Type, Basal-Type).
  • Outcomes: 3-year recurrence-free survival (RFS), analyzed by race and molecular subtype; Cox models adjusted for race and clinicopathologic factors.

Key findings

  • Tumor subtype distribution: Black women had a higher proportion of Basal-Type tumors than White women (11.0% vs 4.8%; p<0.001).
  • 3-year RFS by molecular subtype (regardless of race):
    • Basal-Type: 83.7%
    • Luminal B-Type: 93.7%
    • Luminal A-Type: 96.5% (p<0.0001 across groups).
  • Multivariate analysis: Significantly worse 3-year outcomes for:
    • MammaPrint High-Risk vs Low-Risk.
    • Luminal B-Type and Basal-Type vs Low-Risk Luminal A-Type.
  • Adjusted results: These associations remained significant after adjusting for race and other potential confounders.
  • Genomic risk: Genomic profiling identified a higher proportion of High-Risk HR+/HER2– disease among Black women.

Clinical implications

  • Prognostic value: Molecular subtype and genomic risk add prognostic information beyond traditional clinicopathologic factors and race.
  • Racial disparities: The higher prevalence of Basal-Type and High-Risk biology in Black women likely contributes to racial disparities in early outcomes.
  • Risk stratification and treatment: Incorporating genomic testing (MammaPrint/BluePrint) may help refine risk stratification and guide treatment intensification to mitigate survival differences, particularly for Black women with biologically higher-risk HR+/HER2– disease.

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