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The 70-Gene Prognostic Signature for Korean Breast Cancer Patients

PURPOSE: A 70-gene prognostic signature has prognostic value in patients with node-negative breast cancer in Europe. This diagnostic test known as "MammaPrint™ (70-gene prognostic signature)" was recently validated and implementation was feasible. Therefore, we assessed the 70-gene prognos...

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Autores principales: Na, Kuk Young, Kim, Ku Sang, Lee, Jeong Eon, Kim, Hee Jeong, Yang, Jung-Hyun, Ahn, Sei-Hyun, Moon, Byung-In, Kim, Ra Mi, Ko, Si Mon, Jung, Yong Sik
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Korean Breast Cancer Society 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3148507/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21847392
http://dx.doi.org/10.4048/jbc.2011.14.1.33
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author Na, Kuk Young
Kim, Ku Sang
Lee, Jeong Eon
Kim, Hee Jeong
Yang, Jung-Hyun
Ahn, Sei-Hyun
Moon, Byung-In
Kim, Ra Mi
Ko, Si Mon
Jung, Yong Sik
author_facet Na, Kuk Young
Kim, Ku Sang
Lee, Jeong Eon
Kim, Hee Jeong
Yang, Jung-Hyun
Ahn, Sei-Hyun
Moon, Byung-In
Kim, Ra Mi
Ko, Si Mon
Jung, Yong Sik
author_sort Na, Kuk Young
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: A 70-gene prognostic signature has prognostic value in patients with node-negative breast cancer in Europe. This diagnostic test known as "MammaPrint™ (70-gene prognostic signature)" was recently validated and implementation was feasible. Therefore, we assessed the 70-gene prognostic signature in Korean patients with breast cancer. We compared the risk predicted by the 70-gene prognostic signature with commonly used clinicopathological guidelines among Korean patients with breast cancer. We also analyzed the 70-gene prognostic signature and clinicopathological feature of the patients in comparison with a previous validation study. METHODS: Forty-eight eligible patients with breast cancer (clinical T1-2N0M0) were selected from four hospitals in Korea. Fresh tumor samples were analyzed with a customized microarray for the 70-gene prognostic signature. Concordance between the risk predicted by the 70-gene prognostic signature and risk predicted by commonly used clinicopathological guidelines (St. Gallen guidelines, National Institutes of Health [NIH] guideline, and Adjuvant! Online) was evaluated. RESULTS: Prognosis signatures were assessed in 36 patients. No significant differences were observed in the clinicopathological features of patients compared with previous studies. The 70-gene prognosis signature identified five (13.9%) patients with a low-risk prognosis signature and 31 (86.1%) patients with a high-risk prognosis signature. Clinical risk was concordant with the prognosis signature for 29 patients (80.6%) according to the St. Gallen guidelines; 30 patients (83.4%) according to the NIH guidelines; and 23 patients (63.8%) according to the Adjuvant! Online. Our results were different from previous validation studies in Europe with about a 40% low-risk prognosis and about a 60% high-risk prognosis. The high incidence in the high-risk group was consistent with data in Japan. CONCLUSION: The results of 70-gene prognostic signature of Korean patients with breast cancer were somewhat different from those identified in Europe. This difference should be studied as whether there is a gene disparity between Asians and Europeans. Further large-scale studies with a follow-up evaluation are required to assess whether the use of the 70-gene prognostic signature can predict the prognosis of Korean patients with breast cancer.
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spelling pubmed-31485072011-08-16 The 70-Gene Prognostic Signature for Korean Breast Cancer Patients Na, Kuk Young Kim, Ku Sang Lee, Jeong Eon Kim, Hee Jeong Yang, Jung-Hyun Ahn, Sei-Hyun Moon, Byung-In Kim, Ra Mi Ko, Si Mon Jung, Yong Sik J Breast Cancer Original Article PURPOSE: A 70-gene prognostic signature has prognostic value in patients with node-negative breast cancer in Europe. This diagnostic test known as "MammaPrint™ (70-gene prognostic signature)" was recently validated and implementation was feasible. Therefore, we assessed the 70-gene prognostic signature in Korean patients with breast cancer. We compared the risk predicted by the 70-gene prognostic signature with commonly used clinicopathological guidelines among Korean patients with breast cancer. We also analyzed the 70-gene prognostic signature and clinicopathological feature of the patients in comparison with a previous validation study. METHODS: Forty-eight eligible patients with breast cancer (clinical T1-2N0M0) were selected from four hospitals in Korea. Fresh tumor samples were analyzed with a customized microarray for the 70-gene prognostic signature. Concordance between the risk predicted by the 70-gene prognostic signature and risk predicted by commonly used clinicopathological guidelines (St. Gallen guidelines, National Institutes of Health [NIH] guideline, and Adjuvant! Online) was evaluated. RESULTS: Prognosis signatures were assessed in 36 patients. No significant differences were observed in the clinicopathological features of patients compared with previous studies. The 70-gene prognosis signature identified five (13.9%) patients with a low-risk prognosis signature and 31 (86.1%) patients with a high-risk prognosis signature. Clinical risk was concordant with the prognosis signature for 29 patients (80.6%) according to the St. Gallen guidelines; 30 patients (83.4%) according to the NIH guidelines; and 23 patients (63.8%) according to the Adjuvant! Online. Our results were different from previous validation studies in Europe with about a 40% low-risk prognosis and about a 60% high-risk prognosis. The high incidence in the high-risk group was consistent with data in Japan. CONCLUSION: The results of 70-gene prognostic signature of Korean patients with breast cancer were somewhat different from those identified in Europe. This difference should be studied as whether there is a gene disparity between Asians and Europeans. Further large-scale studies with a follow-up evaluation are required to assess whether the use of the 70-gene prognostic signature can predict the prognosis of Korean patients with breast cancer. Korean Breast Cancer Society 2011-03 2011-03-31 /pmc/articles/PMC3148507/ /pubmed/21847392 http://dx.doi.org/10.4048/jbc.2011.14.1.33 Text en © 2011 Korean Breast Cancer Society http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Na, Kuk Young
Kim, Ku Sang
Lee, Jeong Eon
Kim, Hee Jeong
Yang, Jung-Hyun
Ahn, Sei-Hyun
Moon, Byung-In
Kim, Ra Mi
Ko, Si Mon
Jung, Yong Sik
The 70-Gene Prognostic Signature for Korean Breast Cancer Patients
title The 70-Gene Prognostic Signature for Korean Breast Cancer Patients
title_full The 70-Gene Prognostic Signature for Korean Breast Cancer Patients
title_fullStr The 70-Gene Prognostic Signature for Korean Breast Cancer Patients
title_full_unstemmed The 70-Gene Prognostic Signature for Korean Breast Cancer Patients
title_short The 70-Gene Prognostic Signature for Korean Breast Cancer Patients
title_sort 70-gene prognostic signature for korean breast cancer patients
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3148507/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21847392
http://dx.doi.org/10.4048/jbc.2011.14.1.33
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