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Originally published as JCO Early Release 10.1200/JCO.2009.22.9450 on October 13 2009

Journal of Clinical Oncology, Vol 27, No 32 (November 10), 2009: pp. 5308-5311
© 2009 American Society of Clinical Oncology.

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article-commentary COMMENTS AND CONTROVERSIES

Qualitative Age Interactions in Breast Cancer Studies: Mind the Gap

William F. Anderson

Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, Bethesda, MD

Ismail Jatoi

Breast Care Center, National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, MD

Mark E. Sherman

Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, Bethesda, MD

"Mind the gap" is a warning to subway passengers in London of the sometimes significant space between the train door and station platform. We utilize this phrase to caution researchers to be mindful of the significant gap in our knowledge of age-specific interactions in translational breast cancer research. The relevance of this topic is supported by data showing that many epidemiologic and clinical features of breast cancer demonstrate qualitative age interactions. Here, the term age interaction refers to situations in which breast cancer risk factors, tumor characteristics, and/or clinical trial results differ across age groups. A qualitative age interaction refers to an inverse or crossover effect for different ages. If a qualitative age interaction is suspected, age-related subgroup heterogeneity is likely, and the study should be powered, stratified, or analyzed age specifically to contrast outcomes between younger and older subjects. Failure to do so may blur important age-specific subgroup effects due to averaging of dissimilar cancer populations.1,2

Peto3 distinguished quantitative (noncrossover) from qualitative (crossover) interactions in randomized clinical trials (RCTs). A quantitative interaction occurs if a treatment outcome varies in magnitude but not in direction for subgroups. A qualitative interaction differs in both magnitude and direction, conferring benefit for one subgroup and harm for another. Although quantitative treatment effects are common, qualitative clinical trial results46 are rarely reported (Table 1). Furthermore, qualitative age interactions might be overlooked because age is usually treated as a confounding variable rather than as an effect modifier. As a result, many RCTs adjust or match by age to negate its effect rather than stratify by age to observe its full impact. RCTs also are generally underpowered to analyze age-specific effects. In addition, the age distribution of patients in breast cancer RCTs usually differs from that of patients with comparable tumors in the general community, limiting external validity.


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Table 1. Qualitative Age Interactions

 
The repeated identification of qualitative age interactions in epidemiologic studies suggests that breast cancer demonstrates age-specific heterogeneity that transcends a simple or single cut point such as menopausal status. For example, parity increases breast cancer risk among women younger than 30 to 44 years but decreases risk among older women (Table 1).7,12 Obesity is protective for women younger than 50 years but increases risk thereafter.8 The Black to White incidence rate crossover shows that age-specific incidence rates are higher for Black than White women before age 40 years, after which the reverse is true.9

Age at diagnosis may reflect established as well as unknown carcinogenic events and/or exposures that occur during a person's life time. Age may even account for some risk conferred by factors that have not yet been identified. Indeed, traditional breast cancer factors account for less than 50% of breast cancer attributable risk.14 Analyses using novel descriptive and statistical methods also posit that breast cancer may be characterized by early- and late-onset tumor types with modes near ages 50 and 70 years (Figure 1).10,1518 A bimodal characterization also correlates well with the two main clinical biomarkers (estrogen receptor positive [ER+] and HER2+) and/or molecular breast cancer signatures (luminal and basal-like).1921 However, with few exceptions,2224 many clinical studies and most molecular studies do not account for the obvious age-related breast cancer differences.25


Figure 1
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Fig 1. Bimodal age distribution at diagnosis for invasive female breast cancer cases (n = 94,813) in the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program during the years 1994 through 1997.16 Kernel density estimation was used to produce smoothed age distributions at diagnosis (or density plots) in single years.17 The kernel smoother estimated the underlying probability density function for breast cancer incidence by age at diagnosis in single years. The area under the curve represented 100% of the patients with breast cancer. Early- and late-onset modes were observed near ages 50 and 70 years, respectively. Although the relative distributions of the early- and late-onset breast cancer populations have fluctuated over time (likely due to complex interactions between age-related biologic factors and screening and/or birth-cohort phenomena), the modal ages of 50 and 70 years have been robust across molecular portraits, demographic and tumor characteristics.10,15,18

 
The identification of a bimodal rather than normal age distribution at diagnosis for a particular breast cancer characteristic raises concerns that the feature identifies a biologically heterogeneous tumor type. Bimodal breast cancer in the general population also contrasts sharply with the restricted age range of many clinical trials where fewer than 10% of participants may be 65 years or older.26 Furthermore, the modal ages of 50 and 70 years do not sharply divide tumors into distinctive categories, but rather reflect central tendencies for the age distributions of two biologically different cancer populations.27 Tumors that develop at extreme ages are likely to demonstrate predominant early- or late-onset phenotypes, but both tumor types span the entire age range with substantial mixing during midlife. Therefore, chronological age is only a crude proxy for breast tissue age.28 Of note, qualitative age interactions and bimodal cancer populations appear to transcend breast cancer, having been described for Hodgkin's lymphoma,29 hairy cell leukemia,30 nasopharyngeal carcinoma,31 malignant melanoma,32 high- and low-grade serous ovarian carcinomas.33

Age, then, may reflect many fundamental and incompletely understood biologic processes. Carcinogenic mechanisms that may increase with age include methylation of CpG islands in promoter regions of tumor suppressor genes, telomere shortening, and genetic instability. In parallel, many age-related changes occur within the systemic milieu such as declines in immune function. Given these data, one might predict that rates of all types of breast cancer would increase monotonically with age and that tumors among older women would be more aggressive. In fact, the opposite is true, breast cancer incidence rates decelerate with aging near Clemmesen's menopausal hook34 and older women generally have more indolent tumors than younger women (Table 1),11,25,35 at least before age 70 years.37

Biologic differences for early- versus late-onset tumors also are reflected in different responses to treatments among younger women (Table 1).36,38 Women younger than 35 years who express ER+ tumors have worse outcomes than older women with ER+ tumors irrespective of treatment.4 This may partly be explained by different patterns of coexpression of key markers at different ages. Neven et al39 reported qualitative age interactions between HER2 and hormone receptor expression. Among HER2 normal tumors, the odds ratio (OR) of being ER+ was 2.6 (95% CI, 1.9 to 3.6) up to age 50 years and age-independent thereafter; the OR of being progesterone receptor positive (PR+) was 2.7 (95% CI, 1.8 to 4.1) up to age 45 and 0.8 (95% CI, 0.8 to 0.9) thereafter. Among HER2+ tumors, the OR of being ER+ and PR+ was 0.8 (95% CI, 0.7 to 1.0) and 0.7 (95% CI, 0.6 to 0.9), respectively. However, an unsupervised analysis of gene expression profiles of ER+ tumors diagnosed in either women 45 years of age or younger or 70 years or older identified six gene clusters, two of which were related to early onset and one to later onset tumors.22 These clusters were unrelated to PR or HER2 status, suggesting biologic complexity related to age at diagnosis that is not completely captured by standard breast cancer markers.

Thus, searching for age-dependent biologic heterogeneity in RCTs would seem to be important. The strength of RCTs derives from their strong internal validity; successful random assignment of subjects coupled with statistical analyses to guarantee comparability among study arms, gives confidence that observed differences in outcomes between groups reflects differences in treatment. However, the external validity or generalizability of RCTs cannot be assumed since RCTs enroll volunteers who meet inclusion criteria.

The source population for a RCT includes all women potentially eligible for the trial; specifically, patients with breast cancer whose tumors have the characteristics under study. RCTs increasingly evaluate drugs that are directed against specific molecular targets, but the population characteristics of patients whose tumors express these targets are often undefined. Early estimates from high risk cohorts indicated that 30% of breast cancers were HER2+, but these estimates may have overstated the true frequency for HER2 expression in the general population.40

Limited access to population-based marker data impairs efforts to assess, the comparability of RCT participants to patients in the community. Generalizability concerns are heightened by data showing that RCT participants are generally healthier, wealthier, younger, and more often white and city dwellers than nonparticipants.26,41 Recognition that defining the population-basis for RCTs is important provides the impetus for conducting studies that include molecular analysis of population-based samples.13,42 A critical aspect of such studies is their ability to characterize the entire population of both cases and controls, permitting unbiased estimation of incidence rates by marker expression. This research is facilitated by technologies such as tissue microarrays that permit the efficient characterization of large sample sets, improved methods for assaying fixed tissues, and new statistical tools for data analysis. In addition, retrospective marker analysis in older studies may provide insights into tumor behavior before adoption of new treatments.42,43 Furthermore, community outcome data may be all that is available to assess new treatments among demographic groups that are under-represented in RCTs.

In conclusion, future breast cancer studies should be designed to permit assessment of age-specific outcomes when possible. The validity of breast cancer RCTs that assess targeted treatments may be strengthened by comparing subject characteristics to those estimated in population-based observational studies. The melding of traditional and novel observational methods can define the population characteristics and suggest hypothesis that would be difficult (if not impossible) to derive in smaller analytic studies and/or RCTs. In addition, differences in the age distributions between RCTs and the general breast cancer population may be masking a fundamentally important biologic variable (aging) that may impact the translation of efficacious treatments to effective patient treatment. This takes on added importance among older patients with breast cancer for whom therapy related complications are as important as cancer cure.44 Therefore, the analysis of age-specific effects in RCTs may be a fundamental way to fill the gap of our incomplete understanding of tumor biology and to optimize treatment until more is known of the obligate determinants for breast cancer.

AUTHORS' DISCLOSURES OF POTENTIAL CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

The author(s) indicated no potential conflicts of interest.

AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS

Conception and design: William F. Anderson, Ismail Jatoi, Mark E. Sherman

Administrative support: William F. Anderson

Provision of study materials or patients: William F. Anderson

Collection and assembly of data: William F. Anderson

Data analysis and interpretation: William F. Anderson, Ismail Jatoi, Mark E. Sherman

Manuscript writing: William F. Anderson, Ismail Jatoi, Mark E. Sherman

Final approval of manuscript: William F. Anderson, Ismail Jatoi, Mark E. Sherman

Acknowledgment

Supported in part by the Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute. We thank the reviewers for their helpful comments.

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