Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1186/bcr1517
Title: Intrinsic molecular signature of breast cancer in a population-based cohort of 412 patients
Authors: Calza, S
Hall, P
Auer, G
Bjöhle, J
Klaar, S
Kronenwett, U
Liu, E.T 
Miller, L
Ploner, A
Smeds, J
Bergh, J
Pawitan, Y
Keywords: cyclophosphamide
epidermal growth factor receptor 2
estrogen receptor
fluorouracil
goserelin
methotrexate
protein p53
RNA
tamoxifen
article
breast cancer
cancer classification
cancer survival
cluster analysis
cohort analysis
controlled study
correlation analysis
gene expression
genomic instability
hormone substitution
human
human cell
human tissue
laboratory test
lymph node metastasis
major clinical study
mammography
population research
prediction
prognosis
protein microarray
Sweden
validation process
breast tumor
classification
female
genetics
mutation
pathology
tumor suppressor gene
validation study
Breast Neoplasms
Cohort Studies
Female
Gene Expression
Genes, p53
Genomic Instability
Humans
Mutation
Issue Date: 2006
Citation: Calza, S, Hall, P, Auer, G, Bjöhle, J, Klaar, S, Kronenwett, U, Liu, E.T, Miller, L, Ploner, A, Smeds, J, Bergh, J, Pawitan, Y (2006). Intrinsic molecular signature of breast cancer in a population-based cohort of 412 patients. Breast Cancer Research 8 (4) : R34. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1186/bcr1517
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Background: Molecular markers and the rich biological information they contain have great potential for cancer diagnosis, prognostication and therapy prediction. So far, however, they have not superseded routine histopathology and staging criteria, partly because the few studies performed on molecular subtyping have had little validation and limited clinical characterization. Methods: We obtained gene expression and clinical data for 412 breast cancers obtained from population-based cohorts of patients from Stockholm and Uppsala, Sweden. Using the intrinsic set of approximately 500 genes derived in the Norway/Stanford breast cancer data, we validated the existence of five molecular subtypes - basal-like, ERBB2, luminal A/B and normal-like - and characterized these subtypes extensively with the use of conventional clinical variables. Results: We found an overall 77.5% concordance between the centroid prediction of the Swedish cohort by using the Norway/Stanford signature and the k-means clustering performed internally within the Swedish cohort. The highest rate of discordant assignments occurred between the luminal A and luminal B subtypes and between the luminal B and ERBB2 subtypes. The subtypes varied significantly in terms of grade (p < 0.001), p53 mutation (p < 0.001) and genomic instability (p = 0.01), but surprisingly there was little difference in lymph-node metastasis (p = 0.31). Furthermore, current users of hormone-replacement therapy were strikingly over-represented in the normal-like subgroup (p < 0.001). Separate analyses of the patients who received endocrine therapy and those who did not receive any adjuvant therapy supported the previous hypothesis that the basal-like subtype responded to adjuvant treatment, whereas the ERBB2 and luminal B subtypes were poor responders. Conclusion: We found that the intrinsic molecular subtypes of breast cancer are broadly present in a diverse collection of patients from a population-based cohort in Sweden. The intrinsic gene set, originally selected to reveal stable tumor characteristics, was shown to have a strong correlation with progression-related properties such as grade, p53 mutation and genomic instability. © 2006 Calza et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
Source Title: Breast Cancer Research
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/183287
ISSN: 1465542X
DOI: 10.1186/bcr1517
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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