Country for PR: China
Contributor: PR Newswire Asia (China)
Friday, August 23 2019 - 10:00
AsiaNet
Gencurix's Study Explores the Difference between GenesWell BCT and Oncotype DX
SEOUL, South Korea, Aug.14, 2019/PRNewswire-AsiaNet/--

Gencurix, Inc., a molecular diagnostics company, announced the publication of a 
new study on Frontiers in Oncology comparing GenesWell(TM) BCT, a prognostic 
multigene test, with Genomic Health's Oncotype DX in patients with early-stage 
breast cancer. A key finding from the study is that the overall concordance 
between the BCT score and RS was moderate but the concordance was low in women 
aged 50 years or younger, or with lymph node-positive breast cancer.

"Most multigene expression prognostic assays are based on postmenopausal women 
in Western countries, which raises concerns regarding their prognostic or 
predictive value in Asian, or young breast cancer patients especially in Asian 
countries where more than half of newly diagnosed patients are under 50," said 
Youngkee Shin, M.D., Ph.D., Seoul National University and the corresponding 
author of this article.

In the article, Mi Jeong Kwon et al. compared the risk classification by the 
two tests in a large sample of 771 Asian breast cancer patients with HR+/HER2- 
and pN0/1. The results show that in all patients, the overall concordance 
between the two risk classifications was 71.9%. Especially, overall concordance 
was higher in the lymph node-negative subgroup (76.6%) than that in the 
node-positive subgroup (52.6%). Importantly, of patients in the BCT low-risk 
group, 91.9% were classified as non-high risk according to the RS.

When applying 2018 TAILORx study guideline, more than half of the patients 
(55.6%) would be advised to receive chemotherapy by Oncotype DX. However, only 
31.9% by GenesWell BCT. According to the second analysis of TAILORx study 
recently presented in ASCO 2019, patients aged 50 years or younger should take 
into account their clinical pathological factors in chemotherapy decisions. 
Based on this new RS ranges, the proportion of patients who would be advised to 
receive chemotherapy decreased at 39.1% in the group aged 50 years or younger.

"These results reveal the importance of including clinical pathologic factors 
in predicting recurrence and deciding on whether to add chemotherapy. From the 
very beginning of algorithm design for GenesWell BCT, clinical pathological 
factors have been taken into account," said Sang-rae Cho, the CEO of Gencurix. 
"The findings build on prior studies that demonstrated the clinical utility of 
GenesWell BCT for predicting which women will benefit from adjunctive 
chemotherapy at diagnosis in all ages."

Frontiers in Oncology publication: https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2019.00667.

SOURCE Gencurix Inc.
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