Predicting Prognosis of Breast Cancer Patients with Brain Metastases in the BMBC Registry-Comparison of Three Different GPA Prognostic Scores

  • Kerstin Riecke
  • Volkmar Müller
  • Rudolf Weide
  • Marcus Schmidt
  • Tjoung-Won Park-Simon
  • Volker Möbus
  • Christoph Mundhenke
  • Arkadius Polasik
  • Kristina Lübbe
  • Tobias Hesse
  • Elena Laakmann
  • Marc Thill
  • Peter A Fasching
  • Carsten Denkert
  • Tanja Fehm
  • Valentina Nekljudova
  • Julia Rey
  • Sibylle Loibl
  • Isabell Witzel

Related Research units

Abstract

Several scores have been developed in order to estimate the prognosis of patients with brain metastases (BM) by objective criteria. The aim of this analysis was to validate all three published graded-prognostic-assessment (GPA)-scores in a subcohort of 882 breast cancer (BC) patients with BM in the Brain Metastases in the German Breast Cancer (BMBC) registry. The median age at diagnosis of BM was 57 years. All in all, 22.3% of patients (n = 197) had triple-negative, 33.4% (n = 295) luminal A like, 25.1% (n = 221) luminal B/HER2-enriched like and 19.2% (n = 169) HER2 positive like BC. Age ≥60 years, evidence of extracranial metastases (ECM), higher number of BM, triple-negative subtype and low Karnofsky-Performance-Status (KPS) were all associated with worse overall survival (OS) in univariate analysis (p < 0.001 each). All three GPA-scores were associated with OS. The breast-GPA showed the highest probability of classifying patients with survival above 12 months in the best prognostic group (specificity 68.7% compared with 48.1% for the updated breast-GPA and 21.8% for the original GPA). Sensitivities for predicting 3 months survival were very low for all scores. In this analysis, all GPA-scores showed only moderate diagnostic accuracy in predicting the OS of BC patients with BM.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Article number844
ISSN2072-6694
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 17.02.2021
PubMed 33671376