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A multigene predictor of metastatic outcome in early stage hormone receptor-negative and triple-negative breast cancer

INTRODUCTION: Various multigene predictors of breast cancer clinical outcome have been commercialized, but proved to be prognostic only for hormone receptor (HR) subsets overexpressing estrogen or progesterone receptors. Hormone receptor negative (HRneg) breast cancers, particularly those lacking HE...

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Autores principales: Yau, Christina, Esserman, Laura, Moore, Dan H, Waldman, Fred, Sninsky, John, Benz, Christopher C
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3096978/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20946665
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/bcr2753
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author Yau, Christina
Esserman, Laura
Moore, Dan H
Waldman, Fred
Sninsky, John
Benz, Christopher C
author_facet Yau, Christina
Esserman, Laura
Moore, Dan H
Waldman, Fred
Sninsky, John
Benz, Christopher C
author_sort Yau, Christina
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Various multigene predictors of breast cancer clinical outcome have been commercialized, but proved to be prognostic only for hormone receptor (HR) subsets overexpressing estrogen or progesterone receptors. Hormone receptor negative (HRneg) breast cancers, particularly those lacking HER2/ErbB2 overexpression and known as triple-negative (Tneg) cases, are heterogeneous and generally aggressive breast cancer subsets in need of prognostic subclassification, since most early stage HRneg and Tneg breast cancer patients are cured with conservative treatment yet invariably receive aggressive adjuvant chemotherapy. METHODS: An unbiased search for genes predictive of distant metastatic relapse was undertaken using a training cohort of 199 node-negative, adjuvant treatment naïve HRneg (including 154 Tneg) breast cancer cases curated from three public microarray datasets. Prognostic gene candidates were subsequently validated using a different cohort of 75 node-negative, adjuvant naïve HRneg cases curated from three additional datasets. The HRneg/Tneg gene signature was prognostically compared with eight other previously reported gene signatures, and evaluated for cancer network associations by two commercial pathway analysis programs. RESULTS: A novel set of 14 prognostic gene candidates was identified as outcome predictors: CXCL13, CLIC5, RGS4, RPS28, RFX7, EXOC7, HAPLN1, ZNF3, SSX3, HRBL, PRRG3, ABO, PRTN3, MATN1. A composite HRneg/Tneg gene signature index proved more accurate than any individual candidate gene or other reported multigene predictors in identifying cases likely to remain free of metastatic relapse. Significant positive correlations between the HRneg/Tneg index and three independent immune-related signatures (STAT1, IFN, and IR) were observed, as were consistent negative associations between the three immune-related signatures and five other proliferation module-containing signatures (MS-14, ONCO-RS, GGI, CSR/wound and NKI-70). Network analysis identified 8 genes within the HRneg/Tneg signature as being functionally linked to immune/inflammatory chemokine regulation. CONCLUSIONS: A multigene HRneg/Tneg signature linked to immune/inflammatory cytokine regulation was identified from pooled expression microarray data and shown to be superior to other reported gene signatures in predicting the metastatic outcome of early stage and conservatively managed HRneg and Tneg breast cancer. Further validation of this prognostic signature may lead to new therapeutic insights and spare many newly diagnosed breast cancer patients the need for aggressive adjuvant chemotherapy.
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spelling pubmed-30969782011-05-18 A multigene predictor of metastatic outcome in early stage hormone receptor-negative and triple-negative breast cancer Yau, Christina Esserman, Laura Moore, Dan H Waldman, Fred Sninsky, John Benz, Christopher C Breast Cancer Res Research Article INTRODUCTION: Various multigene predictors of breast cancer clinical outcome have been commercialized, but proved to be prognostic only for hormone receptor (HR) subsets overexpressing estrogen or progesterone receptors. Hormone receptor negative (HRneg) breast cancers, particularly those lacking HER2/ErbB2 overexpression and known as triple-negative (Tneg) cases, are heterogeneous and generally aggressive breast cancer subsets in need of prognostic subclassification, since most early stage HRneg and Tneg breast cancer patients are cured with conservative treatment yet invariably receive aggressive adjuvant chemotherapy. METHODS: An unbiased search for genes predictive of distant metastatic relapse was undertaken using a training cohort of 199 node-negative, adjuvant treatment naïve HRneg (including 154 Tneg) breast cancer cases curated from three public microarray datasets. Prognostic gene candidates were subsequently validated using a different cohort of 75 node-negative, adjuvant naïve HRneg cases curated from three additional datasets. The HRneg/Tneg gene signature was prognostically compared with eight other previously reported gene signatures, and evaluated for cancer network associations by two commercial pathway analysis programs. RESULTS: A novel set of 14 prognostic gene candidates was identified as outcome predictors: CXCL13, CLIC5, RGS4, RPS28, RFX7, EXOC7, HAPLN1, ZNF3, SSX3, HRBL, PRRG3, ABO, PRTN3, MATN1. A composite HRneg/Tneg gene signature index proved more accurate than any individual candidate gene or other reported multigene predictors in identifying cases likely to remain free of metastatic relapse. Significant positive correlations between the HRneg/Tneg index and three independent immune-related signatures (STAT1, IFN, and IR) were observed, as were consistent negative associations between the three immune-related signatures and five other proliferation module-containing signatures (MS-14, ONCO-RS, GGI, CSR/wound and NKI-70). Network analysis identified 8 genes within the HRneg/Tneg signature as being functionally linked to immune/inflammatory chemokine regulation. CONCLUSIONS: A multigene HRneg/Tneg signature linked to immune/inflammatory cytokine regulation was identified from pooled expression microarray data and shown to be superior to other reported gene signatures in predicting the metastatic outcome of early stage and conservatively managed HRneg and Tneg breast cancer. Further validation of this prognostic signature may lead to new therapeutic insights and spare many newly diagnosed breast cancer patients the need for aggressive adjuvant chemotherapy. BioMed Central 2010 2010-10-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3096978/ /pubmed/20946665 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/bcr2753 Text en Copyright ©2010 Yau et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited
spellingShingle Research Article
Yau, Christina
Esserman, Laura
Moore, Dan H
Waldman, Fred
Sninsky, John
Benz, Christopher C
A multigene predictor of metastatic outcome in early stage hormone receptor-negative and triple-negative breast cancer
title A multigene predictor of metastatic outcome in early stage hormone receptor-negative and triple-negative breast cancer
title_full A multigene predictor of metastatic outcome in early stage hormone receptor-negative and triple-negative breast cancer
title_fullStr A multigene predictor of metastatic outcome in early stage hormone receptor-negative and triple-negative breast cancer
title_full_unstemmed A multigene predictor of metastatic outcome in early stage hormone receptor-negative and triple-negative breast cancer
title_short A multigene predictor of metastatic outcome in early stage hormone receptor-negative and triple-negative breast cancer
title_sort multigene predictor of metastatic outcome in early stage hormone receptor-negative and triple-negative breast cancer
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3096978/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20946665
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/bcr2753
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