Publication

GAIN2 trial overall survival with intense versus tailored dose dense chemotherapy in early breast cancer.

Journal Paper/Review - Jul 30, 2024

Units
PubMed
Doi
Contact

Citation
Möbus V, Lück H, Ladda E, Klare P, Engels K, Schmidt M, Schneeweiss A, Grischke E, Wachsmann G, Forstbauer H, Untch M, Marme F, Blohmer J, Jackisch C, Huober J, Stickeler E, Reinisch M, Link T, Sinn B, Janni W, Denkert C, Seiler S, Solbach C, Schmatloch S, Rey J, Loibl S. GAIN2 trial overall survival with intense versus tailored dose dense chemotherapy in early breast cancer. NPJ Breast Cancer 2024; 10:66.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
NPJ Breast Cancer 2024; 10
Publication Date
Jul 30, 2024
Issn Print
2374-4677
Pages
66
Brief description/objective

GAIN-2 trial evaluated the optimal intense dose-dense (idd) strategy for high-risk early breast cancer. This study reports the secondary endpoints pathological complete response (pCR) and overall survival (OS). Patients (n = 2887) were randomized 1:1 between idd epirubicin, nab-paclitaxel, and cyclophosphamide (iddEnPC) versus leukocyte nadir-based tailored regimen of dose-dense EC and docetaxel (dtEC-dtD) as adjuvant therapy, with neoadjuvant therapy allowed after amendment. At median follow-up of 6.5 years (overall cohort) and 5.7 years (neoadjuvant cohort, N = 593), both regimens showed comparable 5-year OS rates (iddEnPC 90.8%, dtEC-dtD 90.0%, p = 0.320). In the neoadjuvant setting, iddEnPC yielded a higher pCR rate than dtEC-dtD (51.2% vs. 42.6%, p = 0.045). Patients achieving pCR had significantly improved 5-year iDFS (88.7% vs. 70.1%, HR 0.33, p < 0.001) and OS rates (93.9% vs. 83.1%, HR 0.32, p < 0.001), but OS outcomes were comparable regardless of pCR status. Thus, iddEnPC demonstrates superior pCR rates compared to dtEC-dtD, yet with comparable survival outcomes.