Background:The ability to accurately predict which patients will achieve a pathologic complete response (pCR) after neoadjuvant chemotherapy could help identify those who could safely be spared the potential morbidity of axillary lymph node dissection. We performed a retrospective analysis of a cohort of clinically node-positive patients managed with neoadjuvant chemotherapy with the goal of identifying predictors of axillary pCR.Methods: Eligible patients were aged 18 years or older, had clinical T1-T4, N1-N3, M0 breast cancer and received neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by surgical axillary lymph node staging between 2001 and 2017 at Misericordia Hospital, Edmonton, Alberta. Patient data, including tumour characteristics, details of neoadjuvant chemotherapy, imaging results before and after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and final pathologic analysis, were collected from the appropriate provincial electronic data repositories. We summarized the data using descriptive statistics. We characterized associations between clinical/tumour characteristics and pCR using univariate and multivariate regression analysis.Results: Of the 323 patients included in the study, 130 (40.2%) achieved axillary pCR. Absence of residual disease in the breast was associated with axillary pCR (odds ratio 6.74, 95% confidence interval 2.89-15.67). HER2-positive, triple-negative and ER-positive/PR-negative/HER2-negative tumours were significantly associated with a pCR on univariate analysis; the association trended toward significance on multivari ate analysis.
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