Predictors of Endocrine Resistance in a Cohort of Mexican Breast Cancer Patients
Jonathan González-Ruíz, Mary Beth Terry, Paula Cabrera-Galeana, Alberto Monroy-Chargoy, Carol Horowitz, Nina Bickel, Claudia García-Cuellar, Andrea Ramírez, Enrique Bargalló, José Diaz-Chavez, Salim Barquet-Muñoz, David Cantú-de-León, Diddier Prada

TL;DR
This study found that 32.5% of Mexican breast cancer patients showed resistance to endocrine therapy, with advanced tumor stage and lack of complete response being key predictors.
Contribution
The study identifies predictors of endocrine resistance in a specific Hispanic Mexican breast cancer cohort and links resistance to survival outcomes.
Findings
Endocrine resistance was observed in 32.5% of patients, with larger tumor size and advanced node status strongly associated.
Endocrine resistance significantly increased mortality risk with a hazard ratio of 23.7 in adjusted models.
Complete pathological response reduced endocrine resistance risk, with a risk ratio of 0.15.
Abstract
This study aimed to determine the prevalence of endocrine resistance in a cohort of Hispanic Mexican breast cancer (BC) patients receiving care at Instituto Nacional de Cancerología (INCan). Additionally, the clinical-pathological factors associated with endocrine resistance were identified, and their impact on patient survival was explored. A retrospective analysis of 200 BC patients who attended INCan between 2012 and 2016 with estrogen receptor (ER) and progesterone receptor (PR) positive tumors was made. Endocrine resistance was defined according to the International Consensus Guidelines for Advance Breast Cancer 2 definition. Their clinicopathological characteristics were analyzed to determine the association with endocrine resistance presence. We used sensitivity analyses and multivariate-adjusted logistic regressions, Kaplan-Meier curves, and multivariate-adjusted Cox…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBreast Cancer Treatment Studies · Estrogen and related hormone effects · Cancer Risks and Factors
