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Selective Genomic Copy Number Imbalances and Probability of Recurrence in Early-Stage Breast Cancer

A number of studies of copy number imbalances (CNIs) in breast tumors support associations between individual CNIs and patient outcomes. However, no pattern or signature of CNIs has emerged for clinical use. We determined copy number (CN) gains and losses using high-density molecular inversion probe...

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Autores principales: Thompson, Patricia A., Brewster, Abenaa M., Kim-Anh, Do, Baladandayuthapani, Veerabhadran, Broom, Bradley M., Edgerton, Mary E., Hahn, Karin M., Murray, James L., Sahin, Aysegul, Tsavachidis, Spyros, Wang, Yuker, Zhang, Li, Hortobagyi, Gabriel N., Mills, Gordon B., Bondy, Melissa L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3155554/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21858162
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023543
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author Thompson, Patricia A.
Brewster, Abenaa M.
Kim-Anh, Do
Baladandayuthapani, Veerabhadran
Broom, Bradley M.
Edgerton, Mary E.
Hahn, Karin M.
Murray, James L.
Sahin, Aysegul
Tsavachidis, Spyros
Wang, Yuker
Zhang, Li
Hortobagyi, Gabriel N.
Mills, Gordon B.
Bondy, Melissa L.
author_facet Thompson, Patricia A.
Brewster, Abenaa M.
Kim-Anh, Do
Baladandayuthapani, Veerabhadran
Broom, Bradley M.
Edgerton, Mary E.
Hahn, Karin M.
Murray, James L.
Sahin, Aysegul
Tsavachidis, Spyros
Wang, Yuker
Zhang, Li
Hortobagyi, Gabriel N.
Mills, Gordon B.
Bondy, Melissa L.
author_sort Thompson, Patricia A.
collection PubMed
description A number of studies of copy number imbalances (CNIs) in breast tumors support associations between individual CNIs and patient outcomes. However, no pattern or signature of CNIs has emerged for clinical use. We determined copy number (CN) gains and losses using high-density molecular inversion probe (MIP) arrays for 971 stage I/II breast tumors and applied a boosting strategy to fit hazards models for CN and recurrence, treating chromosomal segments in a dose-specific fashion (-1 [loss], 0 [no change] and +1 [gain]). The concordance index (C-Index) was used to compare prognostic accuracy between a training (n = 728) and test (n = 243) set and across models. Twelve novel prognostic CNIs were identified: losses at 1p12, 12q13.13, 13q12.3, 22q11, and Xp21, and gains at 2p11.1, 3q13.12, 10p11.21, 10q23.1, 11p15, 14q13.2-q13.3, and 17q21.33. In addition, seven CNIs previously implicated as prognostic markers were selected: losses at 8p22 and 16p11.2 and gains at 10p13, 11q13.5, 12p13, 20q13, and Xq28. For all breast cancers combined, the final full model including 19 CNIs, clinical covariates, and tumor marker-approximated subtypes (estrogen receptor [ER], progesterone receptor, ERBB2 amplification, and Ki67) significantly outperformed a model containing only clinical covariates and tumor subtypes (C-Index( full model), train[test]  =  0.72[0.71] ± 0.02 vs. C-Index( clinical + subtype model), train[test]  =  0.62[0.62] ± 0.02; p<10(−6)). In addition, the full model containing 19 CNIs significantly improved prognostication separately for ER–, HER2+, luminal B, and triple negative tumors over clinical variables alone. In summary, we show that a set of 19 CNIs discriminates risk of recurrence among early-stage breast tumors, independent of ER status. Further, our data suggest the presence of specific CNIs that promote and, in some cases, limit tumor spread.
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spelling pubmed-31555542011-08-19 Selective Genomic Copy Number Imbalances and Probability of Recurrence in Early-Stage Breast Cancer Thompson, Patricia A. Brewster, Abenaa M. Kim-Anh, Do Baladandayuthapani, Veerabhadran Broom, Bradley M. Edgerton, Mary E. Hahn, Karin M. Murray, James L. Sahin, Aysegul Tsavachidis, Spyros Wang, Yuker Zhang, Li Hortobagyi, Gabriel N. Mills, Gordon B. Bondy, Melissa L. PLoS One Research Article A number of studies of copy number imbalances (CNIs) in breast tumors support associations between individual CNIs and patient outcomes. However, no pattern or signature of CNIs has emerged for clinical use. We determined copy number (CN) gains and losses using high-density molecular inversion probe (MIP) arrays for 971 stage I/II breast tumors and applied a boosting strategy to fit hazards models for CN and recurrence, treating chromosomal segments in a dose-specific fashion (-1 [loss], 0 [no change] and +1 [gain]). The concordance index (C-Index) was used to compare prognostic accuracy between a training (n = 728) and test (n = 243) set and across models. Twelve novel prognostic CNIs were identified: losses at 1p12, 12q13.13, 13q12.3, 22q11, and Xp21, and gains at 2p11.1, 3q13.12, 10p11.21, 10q23.1, 11p15, 14q13.2-q13.3, and 17q21.33. In addition, seven CNIs previously implicated as prognostic markers were selected: losses at 8p22 and 16p11.2 and gains at 10p13, 11q13.5, 12p13, 20q13, and Xq28. For all breast cancers combined, the final full model including 19 CNIs, clinical covariates, and tumor marker-approximated subtypes (estrogen receptor [ER], progesterone receptor, ERBB2 amplification, and Ki67) significantly outperformed a model containing only clinical covariates and tumor subtypes (C-Index( full model), train[test]  =  0.72[0.71] ± 0.02 vs. C-Index( clinical + subtype model), train[test]  =  0.62[0.62] ± 0.02; p<10(−6)). In addition, the full model containing 19 CNIs significantly improved prognostication separately for ER–, HER2+, luminal B, and triple negative tumors over clinical variables alone. In summary, we show that a set of 19 CNIs discriminates risk of recurrence among early-stage breast tumors, independent of ER status. Further, our data suggest the presence of specific CNIs that promote and, in some cases, limit tumor spread. Public Library of Science 2011-08-12 /pmc/articles/PMC3155554/ /pubmed/21858162 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023543 Text en Thompson et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Thompson, Patricia A.
Brewster, Abenaa M.
Kim-Anh, Do
Baladandayuthapani, Veerabhadran
Broom, Bradley M.
Edgerton, Mary E.
Hahn, Karin M.
Murray, James L.
Sahin, Aysegul
Tsavachidis, Spyros
Wang, Yuker
Zhang, Li
Hortobagyi, Gabriel N.
Mills, Gordon B.
Bondy, Melissa L.
Selective Genomic Copy Number Imbalances and Probability of Recurrence in Early-Stage Breast Cancer
title Selective Genomic Copy Number Imbalances and Probability of Recurrence in Early-Stage Breast Cancer
title_full Selective Genomic Copy Number Imbalances and Probability of Recurrence in Early-Stage Breast Cancer
title_fullStr Selective Genomic Copy Number Imbalances and Probability of Recurrence in Early-Stage Breast Cancer
title_full_unstemmed Selective Genomic Copy Number Imbalances and Probability of Recurrence in Early-Stage Breast Cancer
title_short Selective Genomic Copy Number Imbalances and Probability of Recurrence in Early-Stage Breast Cancer
title_sort selective genomic copy number imbalances and probability of recurrence in early-stage breast cancer
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3155554/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21858162
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023543
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