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Dive into the research topics where Bent Ejlertsen is active.

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Featured researches published by Bent Ejlertsen.


Annals of Oncology | 2013

Personalizing the treatment of women with early breast cancer: highlights of the St Gallen International Expert Consensus on the Primary Therapy of Early Breast Cancer 2013

A. Goldhirsch; E P Winer; A S Coates; R D Gelber; M Piccart-Gebhart; B. Thürlimann; H.-J. Senn; Kathy S. Albain; Fabrice Andre; Jonas Bergh; Hervé Bonnefoi; Denisse Bretel-Morales; Harold J. Burstein; Fatima Cardoso; Monica Castiglione-Gertsch; Alan S. Coates; Marco Colleoni; Alberto Costa; Giuseppe Curigliano; Nancy E. Davidson; Angelo Di Leo; Bent Ejlertsen; John F Forbes; Richard D. Gelber; Michael Gnant; Aron Goldhirsch; Pamela J. Goodwin; Paul E. Goss; Jay R. Harris; Daniel F. Hayes

The 13th St Gallen International Breast Cancer Conference (2013) Expert Panel reviewed and endorsed substantial new evidence on aspects of the local and regional therapies for early breast cancer, supporting less extensive surgery to the axilla and shorter durations of radiation therapy. It refined its earlier approach to the classification and management of luminal disease in the absence of amplification or overexpression of the Human Epidermal growth factor Receptor 2 (HER2) oncogene, while retaining essentially unchanged recommendations for the systemic adjuvant therapy of HER2-positive and ‘triple-negative’ disease. The Panel again accepted that conventional clinico-pathological factors provided a surrogate subtype classification, while noting that in those areas of the world where multi-gene molecular assays are readily available many clinicians prefer to base chemotherapy decisions for patients with luminal disease on these genomic results rather than the surrogate subtype definitions. Several multi-gene molecular assays were recognized as providing accurate and reproducible prognostic information, and in some cases prediction of response to chemotherapy. Cost and availability preclude their application in many environments at the present time. Broad treatment recommendations are presented. Such recommendations do not imply that each Panel member agrees: indeed, among more than 100 questions, only one (trastuzumab duration) commanded 100% agreement. The various recommendations in fact carried differing degrees of support, as reflected in the nuanced wording of the text below and in the votes recorded in supplementary Appendix S1, available at Annals of Oncology online. Detailed decisions on treatment will as always involve clinical consideration of disease extent, host factors, patient preferences and social and economic constraints.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 1996

Femoral fractures in postmenopausal breast cancer patients treated with adjuvant tamoxifen.

Bent Kristensen; Bent Ejlertsen; H. T. Mouridsen; Knud West Andersen; Jes Bruun Lauritzen

SummaryThe anti-estrogen tamoxifen is the prevalent endocrine treatment in postmenopausal breast cancer patients. However, nothing is known about the long-term effects of the drug on the skeleton as assessed by the occurrence of fractures.We investigated the occurrence of fractures of the femur in patients from a Danish Breast Cancer Cooperative Group (DBCG) trial initiated in 1977 by a linkage of data from the Danish National Registry of Patients with data from the DBCG registry. 1716 postmenopausal women with high-risk breast cancer were randomized to local radiotherapy with or without tamoxifen, 30 mg daily for 1 year.Fifty-one patients in the control group had one femoral fracture and 64 tamoxifen treated patients had one femoral fracture. Eleven patients in the control group had one trochanteric fracture compared to 27 patients in the tamoxifen group (logrank = 5.28, P = 0.022; hazard ratio = 2.12, 95% CL 1.12, 4.01).The results could not be explained by a longer survival in the tamoxifen group nor by bone metastases with pathological fractures.In conclusion, our study suggests that tamoxifen does not seem to offer protection against fractures in old age and may even increase the risk of fractures at particular sites. This hypothesis needs to be disproved or confirmed in other trials.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010

HER2, TOP2A, and TIMP-1 and Responsiveness to Adjuvant Anthracycline-Containing Chemotherapy in High-Risk Breast Cancer Patients

Bent Ejlertsen; Maj-Britt Jensen; Kirsten Vang Nielsen; Eva Balslev; Birgitte Bruun Rasmussen; Gro L. Willemoe; Pernille Braemer Hertel; Ann Knoop; Henning T. Mouridsen; Nils Brünner

PURPOSE To evaluate whether the combination of HER2 with TIMP-1 (HT) or TOP2A with TIMP-1 (2T) more accurately identifies patients who benefit from cyclophosphamide, epirubicin, and fluorouracil (CEF) compared with cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, and fluorouracil (CMF) than these markers do when analyzed individually. PATIENTS AND METHODS The Danish Breast Cancer Cooperative Group (DBCG) 89D trial randomly assigned 980 high-risk Danish breast cancer patients to CMF or CEF. Archival tumor tissue was analyzed TIMP-1, and HER2-negative and TIMP-1 immunoreactive tumors were classified as HT nonresponsive and otherwise HT responsive. Similarly, the 2T panel was constructed by combining TOP2A and TIMP-1; tumors with normal TOP2A status and TIMP-1 immunoreactivity were classified as 2T-nonresponsive and otherwise 2T-responsive. Results In total, 623 tumors were available for analysis, of which 154 lacked TIMP-1 immunoreactivity, 188 were HER2 positive, and 139 had a TOP2A aberration. HT status was a statistically significant predictor of benefit from CEF compared with CMF (P(interaction) = .036 for invasive disease-free survival [IDFS] and .047 for overall survival [OS]). The 269 (43%) patients with a 2T-responsive profile had a significant reduction in IDFS events (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.48; 95% CI, 0.34 to 0.69; P < .001) and OS events (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.54; 95% CI, 0.38 to 0.77; P < .001). 2T status was a highly significant predictor of benefit from CEF compared with CMF (P(interaction) < .0001 for IDFS and .004 for OS). CONCLUSION The 2T profile is a more accurate predictor of incremental benefit from anthracycline-containing chemotherapy than HER2, TIMP-1, or TOP2A individually, and compared with these, 2T classifies a larger proportion of patients as sensitive to anthracyclines.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2009

Large BRCA1 and BRCA2 genomic rearrangements in Malaysian high risk breast-ovarian cancer families

Thomas vO Hansen; Lars Jønson; Anders Albrechtsen; Mette K. Andersen; Bent Ejlertsen; Finn C. Nielsen

BRCA1 and BRCA2 germ-line mutations predispose to breast and ovarian cancer. Large genomic rearrangements of BRCA1 account for 0–36% of all disease causing mutations in various populations, while large genomic rearrangements in BRCA2 are more rare. We examined 642 East Danish breast and/or ovarian cancer patients in whom a deleterious mutation in BRCA1 and BRCA2 was not detected by sequencing using the multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) assay. We identified 15 patients with 7 different genomic rearrangements, including a BRCA1 exon 5–7 deletion with a novel breakpoint, a BRCA1 exon 13 duplication, a BRCA1 exon 17–19 deletion, a BRCA1 exon 3–16 deletion, and a BRCA2 exon 20 deletion with a novel breakpoint as well as two novel BRCA1 exon 17–18 and BRCA1 exon 19 deletions. The large rearrangements in BRCA1 and BRCA2 accounted for 9.2% (15/163) of all BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations in East Denmark. Nine patients had the exon 3–16 deletion in BRCA1. By SNP analysis we find that the patients share a 5xa0Mb fragment of chromosome 17, including BRCA1, indicating that the exon 3–16 deletion represents a Danish founder mutation.


European Journal of Cancer | 1993

Decreased efficacy of cyclophosphamide, epirubicin and 5-fluorouracil in metastatic breast cancer when reducing treatment duration from 18 to 6 months

Bent Ejlertsen; H. T. Mouridsen; B. Kristensen; Per Pfeiffer; Carsten Rose; D. Pederson; M. Overgaard; Erik Sandberg

The impact of treatment duration on survival and progression-free survival is uncertain in metastatic breast cancer. In this trial 359 patients were randomised to receive cyclophosphamide, epirubicin and 5-fluorouracil (CEF) once every 3 weeks for a maximum of 18 months or identical chemotherapy for a maximum of 6 months. Following progressive disease (PD) or severe toxicity CEF was discontinued before the scheduled maximum duration. A second series of CEF continued for a maximum of 12 months was offered to patients with PD more than 3 weeks after completing a maximum of 6 months of CEF. Both groups received tamoxifen (30 mg daily) until PD, and premenopausal patients also received ovarian irradiation. After 6 months 254 evaluable patients were unprogressive. Survival and progression-free survival were significantly longer in 127 patients continuing CEF than in 127 patients interrupting CEF at 6 months (chi 2 = 17.6, P = 0.00003 and chi 2 = 4.7, P = 0.03, respectively). The results of the second series of CEF were discouraging with only one complete response in 44 evaluable patients. In conclusion, prolonged chemotherapy for 18 months is superior to identical chemotherapy for 6 months in the treatment of metastatic breast cancer.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2012

Obesity and risk of recurrence or death after adjuvant endocrine therapy with letrozole or tamoxifen in the breast international group 1-98 trial

Marianne Ewertz; Kathryn P. Gray; Meredith M. Regan; Bent Ejlertsen; Karen N. Price; Beat Thürlimann; Hervé Bonnefoi; John F Forbes; Robert Paridaens; Manuela Rabaglio; Richard D. Gelber; Marco Colleoni; István Láng; Ian E. Smith; Alan S. Coates; Aron Goldhirsch; H. T. Mouridsen

PURPOSEnTo examine the association of baseline body mass index (BMI) with the risk of recurrence or death in postmenopausal women with early-stage breast cancer receiving adjuvant tamoxifen or letrozole in the Breast International Group (BIG) 1-98 trial at 8.7 years of median follow-up.nnnPATIENTS AND METHODSnThis report analyzes 4,760 patients with breast cancer randomly assigned to 5 years of monotherapy with letrozole or tamoxifen in the BIG 1-98 trial with available information on BMI at randomization. Multivariable Cox modeling assessed the association of BMI with disease-free survival, overall survival (OS), breast cancer-free interval, and distant recurrence-free interval and tested for treatment-by-BMI interaction. Median follow-up was 8.7 years.nnnRESULTSnSeventeen percent of patients have died. Obese patients (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m(2)) had slightly poorer OS (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.19; 95% CI, 0.99 to 1.44) than patients with normal BMI (< 25 kg/m(2)), whereas no trend in OS was observed in overweight (BMI 25 to < 30 kg/m(2)) versus normal-weight patients (HR = 1.02; 95% CI, 0.86 to 1.20). Treatment-by-BMI interactions were not statistically significant. The HRs for OS comparing obese versus normal BMI were HR = 1.22 (95% CI, 0.93 to 1.60) and HR = 1.18 (95% CI, 0.91 to 1.52) in the letrozole and tamoxifen groups, respectively.nnnCONCLUSIONnThere was no evidence that the benefit of letrozole over tamoxifen differed according to patients BMI.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2015

Relative Effectiveness of Letrozole Compared With Tamoxifen for Patients With Lobular Carcinoma in the BIG 1-98 Trial

Otto Metzger Filho; Anita Giobbie-Hurder; Elizabeth Mallon; Barry A. Gusterson; Giuseppe Viale; Beat Thürlimann; Richard D. Gelber; Marco Colleoni; Bent Ejlertsen; Marc Debled; Karen N. Price; Meredith M. Regan; Alan S. Coates; Aron Goldhirsch

PURPOSEnTo evaluate the relative effectiveness of letrozole compared with tamoxifen for patients with invasive ductal or lobular carcinoma.nnnPATIENTS AND METHODSnPatients diagnosed with early-stage invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC) or classic invasive lobular carcinoma (ILC) who were randomly assigned onto the Breast International Group (BIG) 1-98 trial and who had centrally reviewed pathology data were included (N = 2,923). HER2-negative IDC and ILC were additionally classified as hormone receptor-positive with high (luminal B [LB] -like) or low (luminal A [LA] -like) proliferative activity by Ki-67 labeling index. Survival analyses were performed with weighted Cox models that used inverse probability of censoring weighted modeling.nnnRESULTSnThe median follow-up time was 8.1 years. In multivariable models for disease-free survival (DFS), significant interactions between treatment and histology (ILC or IDC; P = .006) and treatment and subgroup (LB like or LA like; P = .01) were observed. In the ILC subset, there was a 66% reduction in the hazard of a DFS event with letrozole for LB (hazard ratio [HR], 0.34; 95% CI, 0.21 to 0.55) and a 50% reduction for LA subtypes (HR, 0.50; 95% CI, 0.32 to 0.78). In the IDC subset, there was a significant 35% reduction in the hazard of a DFS event with letrozole for the LB subtype (HR, 0.65; 95% CI, 0.53 to 0.79), but no difference between treatments was noted for IDC and the LA subtype (HR, 0.95; 95% CI, 0.76 to 1.20).nnnCONCLUSIONnThe magnitude of benefit of adjuvant letrozole is greater for patients diagnosed with lobular carcinoma versus ductal carcinoma.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2014

Prospective Validation of HLA-DRB1*07:01 Allele Carriage As a Predictive Risk Factor for Lapatinib-Induced Liver Injury

Daniel J. Schaid; Colin F. Spraggs; Shannon K. McDonnell; Laura Rae Parham; Charles J. Cox; Bent Ejlertsen; Dianne M. Finkelstein; Erica Rappold; Joan Curran; Lon R. Cardon; Paul E. Goss

PURPOSEnLiver injury is a serious adverse event leading to permanent discontinuation of lapatinib in affected patients. This study aimed to validate previously associated major histocompatibility complex (MHC) variants as predictors of risk of liver injury by using a large, randomized, placebo-controlled trial of lapatinib in human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-positive, early-stage breast cancer (Tykerb Evaluation After Chemotherapy [TEACH]: Lapatinib Versus Placebo In Women With Early-Stage Breast Cancer).nnnPATIENTS AND METHODSnThe frequency of ALT elevation cases was compared among four MHC variants in 1,194 patients randomly assigned to lapatinib. Cumulative ALT elevation time courses during treatment were also compared between carriers and noncarriers of specified MHC variants.nnnRESULTSnIn lapatinib-treated patients, there was a significant difference in ALT case incidence between HLA carriers and noncarriers. The highly correlated alleles HLA-DRB1*07:01 and HLA-DQA1*02:01 (study frequency, 22.4%) were associated with ALT elevation (odds ratio, 14) between cases (n = 37) and controls (n = 1,071). These associations strengthened at higher ALT elevation thresholds and in Hys Law cases. In lapatinib-treated patients, the overall risk for National Cancer Institute-Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events grade 3 ALT elevation (> 5× upper limit of normal) was 2.1%; HLA allele carriers had an increased risk of 7.7%; in noncarriers, risk was reduced to 0.5%, comparable to ALT elevation for all patients receiving placebo. The increase in ALT case incidence in the lapatinib arm showed no evidence of plateau during 1 year of lapatinib treatment.nnnCONCLUSIONnThese results validate HLA-DRB1*07:01 allele carriage as a predictor of increased risk of lapatinib-induced liver injury and implicate an immune pathology. The HLA association could support clinical management of patients experiencing hepatotoxicity during lapatinib treatment.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2016

Treatment Adherence and Its Impact on Disease-Free Survival in the Breast International Group 1-98 Trial of Tamoxifen and Letrozole, Alone and in Sequence

Jacquie Chirgwin; Anita Giobbie-Hurder; Alan S. Coates; Karen N. Price; Bent Ejlertsen; Marc Debled; Richard D. Gelber; Aron Goldhirsch; Ian E. Smith; Manuela Rabaglio; John Forbes; Patrick Neven; István Láng; Marco Colleoni; Beat Thürlimann

PURPOSEnTo investigate adherence to endocrine treatment and its relationship with disease-free survival (DFS) in the Breast International Group (BIG) 1-98 clinical trial.nnnMETHODSnThe BIG 1-98 trial is a double-blind trial that randomly assigned 6,193 postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive early breast cancer in the four-arm option to 5 years of tamoxifen (Tam), letrozole (Let), or the agents in sequence (Let-Tam, Tam-Let). This analysis included 6,144 women who received at least one dose of study treatment. Conditional landmark analyses and marginal structural Cox proportional hazards models were used to evaluate the relationship between DFS and treatment adherence (persistence [duration] and compliance with dosage). Competing risks regression was used to assess demographic, disease, and treatment characteristics of the women who stopped treatment early because of adverse events.nnnRESULTSnBoth aspects of low adherence (early cessation of letrozole and a compliance score of < 90%) were associated with reduced DFS (multivariable model hazard ratio, 1.45; 95% CI, 1.09 to 1.93; P = .01; and multivariable model hazard ratio, 1.61; 95% CI, 1.08 to 2.38; P = .02, respectively). Sequential treatments were associated with higher rates of nonpersistence (Tam-Let, 20.8%; Let-Tam, 20.3%; Tam 16.9%; Let 17.6%). Adverse events were the reason for most trial treatment early discontinuations (82.7%). Apart from sequential treatment assignment, reduced adherence was associated with older age, smoking, node negativity, or prior thromboembolic event.nnnCONCLUSIONnBoth persistence and compliance are associated with DFS. Toxicity management and, for sequential treatments, patient and physician awareness, may improve adherence.


BMC Medical Genetics | 2008

Novel de novo BRCA2

Thomas vO Hansen; Marie Luise Bisgaard; Lars Jønson; Anders Albrechtsen; Bettina Filtenborg-Barnkob; Bent Ejlertsen; Finn C. Nielsen

BackgroundBRCA2 germ-line mutations predispose to breast and ovarian cancer. Mutations are widespread and unclassified splice variants are frequently encountered. We describe the parental origin and functional characterization of a novel de novo BRCA2 splice site mutation found in a patient exhibiting a ductal carcinoma at the age of 40.MethodsVariations were identified by denaturing high performance liquid chromatography (dHPLC) and sequencing of the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes. The effect of the mutation on splicing was examined by exon trapping in COS-7 cells and by RT-PCR on RNA isolated from whole blood. The paternity was determined by single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) microarray analysis. Parental origin of the de novo mutation was determined by establishing mutation-SNP haplotypes by variant specific PCR, while de novo and mosaic status was investigated by sequencing of DNA from leucocytes and carcinoma tissue.ResultsA novel BRCA2 variant in the splice donor site of exon 21 (nucleotide 8982+1 G→A/c.8754+1 G→A) was identified. Exon trapping showed that the mutation activates a cryptic splice site 46 base pairs 3 of exon 21, resulting in the inclusion of a premature stop codon and synthesis of a truncated BRCA2 protein. The aberrant splicing was verified by RT-PCR analysis on RNA isolated from whole blood of the affected patient. The mutation was not found in any of the patients parents or in the mothers carcinoma, showing it is a de novo mutation. Variant specific PCR indicates that the mutation arose in the male germ-line.ConclusionWe conclude that the novel BRCA2 splice variant is a de novo mutation introduced in the male spermatozoa that can be classified as a disease causing mutation.

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Lars Jønson

University of Copenhagen

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Ann Knoop

Aarhus University Hospital

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Maj-Britt Jensen

Copenhagen University Hospital

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