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Gene expression profiles derived from fine needle aspiration correlate with response to systemic chemotherapy in breast cancer

BACKGROUND: Drug resistance in breast cancer is a major obstacle to successful chemotherapy. In this study we used cDNA microarray technology to examine gene expression profiles obtained from fine needle aspiration (FNA) of primary breast tumors before and after systemic chemotherapy. Our goal was t...

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Autores principales: Sotiriou, Christos, Powles, Trevor J, Dowsett, Mitch, Jazaeri, Amir A, Feldman, Andrew L, Assersohn, Laura, Gadisetti, Chandramouli, Libutti, Steven K, Liu, Edison T
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2002
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC111028/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12052255
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author Sotiriou, Christos
Powles, Trevor J
Dowsett, Mitch
Jazaeri, Amir A
Feldman, Andrew L
Assersohn, Laura
Gadisetti, Chandramouli
Libutti, Steven K
Liu, Edison T
author_facet Sotiriou, Christos
Powles, Trevor J
Dowsett, Mitch
Jazaeri, Amir A
Feldman, Andrew L
Assersohn, Laura
Gadisetti, Chandramouli
Libutti, Steven K
Liu, Edison T
author_sort Sotiriou, Christos
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Drug resistance in breast cancer is a major obstacle to successful chemotherapy. In this study we used cDNA microarray technology to examine gene expression profiles obtained from fine needle aspiration (FNA) of primary breast tumors before and after systemic chemotherapy. Our goal was to determine the feasibility of obtaining representative expression array profiles from limited amounts of tissue and to identify those expression profiles that correlate with treatment response. METHODS: Repeat presurgical FNA samples were taken from six patients who were to undergo primary surgical treatment. Additionally, a group of 10 patients who were to receive neoadjuvant chemotherapy underwent two FNAs before chemotherapy (adriamycin 60 mg/m(2) and cyclophosphamide 600 mg/m(2)) followed by another FNA on day 21 after the first cycle. Total RNA was amplified with T7 Eberwine's procedure and labeled cDNA was hybridized onto a 7600-feature glass cDNA microarray. RESULTS: We identified candidate gene expression profiles that might distinguish tumors with complete response to chemotherapy from tumors that do not respond, and found that the number of genes that change after one cycle of chemotherapy was 10 times greater in the responding group than in the non-responding group. CONCLUSION: This study supports the suitability of FNA-derived cDNA microarray expression profiling of breast cancers as a comprehensive genomic approach for studying the mechanisms of drug resistance. Our findings also demonstrate the potential of monitoring post-chemotherapy changes in expression profiles as a measure of pharmacodynamic effect and suggests that these approaches might yield useful results when validated by larger studies.
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spelling pubmed-1110282002-05-15 Gene expression profiles derived from fine needle aspiration correlate with response to systemic chemotherapy in breast cancer Sotiriou, Christos Powles, Trevor J Dowsett, Mitch Jazaeri, Amir A Feldman, Andrew L Assersohn, Laura Gadisetti, Chandramouli Libutti, Steven K Liu, Edison T Breast Cancer Res Research Article BACKGROUND: Drug resistance in breast cancer is a major obstacle to successful chemotherapy. In this study we used cDNA microarray technology to examine gene expression profiles obtained from fine needle aspiration (FNA) of primary breast tumors before and after systemic chemotherapy. Our goal was to determine the feasibility of obtaining representative expression array profiles from limited amounts of tissue and to identify those expression profiles that correlate with treatment response. METHODS: Repeat presurgical FNA samples were taken from six patients who were to undergo primary surgical treatment. Additionally, a group of 10 patients who were to receive neoadjuvant chemotherapy underwent two FNAs before chemotherapy (adriamycin 60 mg/m(2) and cyclophosphamide 600 mg/m(2)) followed by another FNA on day 21 after the first cycle. Total RNA was amplified with T7 Eberwine's procedure and labeled cDNA was hybridized onto a 7600-feature glass cDNA microarray. RESULTS: We identified candidate gene expression profiles that might distinguish tumors with complete response to chemotherapy from tumors that do not respond, and found that the number of genes that change after one cycle of chemotherapy was 10 times greater in the responding group than in the non-responding group. CONCLUSION: This study supports the suitability of FNA-derived cDNA microarray expression profiling of breast cancers as a comprehensive genomic approach for studying the mechanisms of drug resistance. Our findings also demonstrate the potential of monitoring post-chemotherapy changes in expression profiles as a measure of pharmacodynamic effect and suggests that these approaches might yield useful results when validated by larger studies. BioMed Central 2002 2002-03-20 /pmc/articles/PMC111028/ /pubmed/12052255 Text en Copyright © 2002 BioMed Central Ltd
spellingShingle Research Article
Sotiriou, Christos
Powles, Trevor J
Dowsett, Mitch
Jazaeri, Amir A
Feldman, Andrew L
Assersohn, Laura
Gadisetti, Chandramouli
Libutti, Steven K
Liu, Edison T
Gene expression profiles derived from fine needle aspiration correlate with response to systemic chemotherapy in breast cancer
title Gene expression profiles derived from fine needle aspiration correlate with response to systemic chemotherapy in breast cancer
title_full Gene expression profiles derived from fine needle aspiration correlate with response to systemic chemotherapy in breast cancer
title_fullStr Gene expression profiles derived from fine needle aspiration correlate with response to systemic chemotherapy in breast cancer
title_full_unstemmed Gene expression profiles derived from fine needle aspiration correlate with response to systemic chemotherapy in breast cancer
title_short Gene expression profiles derived from fine needle aspiration correlate with response to systemic chemotherapy in breast cancer
title_sort gene expression profiles derived from fine needle aspiration correlate with response to systemic chemotherapy in breast cancer
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC111028/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12052255
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