Cargando…

Contrasting breast cancer molecular subtypes across serial tumor progression stages: biological and prognostic implications

The relevance of the intrinsic subtypes for clinical management of metastatic breast cancer is not comprehensively established. We aimed to evaluate the prevalence and prognostic significance of drifts in tumor molecular subtypes during breast cancer progression. A well-annotated cohort of 304 women...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kimbung, Siker, Kovács, Anikó, Danielsson, Anna, Bendahl, Pär-Ola, Lövgren, Kristina, Stolt, Marianne Frostvik, Tobin, Nicholas P., Lindström, Linda, Bergh, Jonas, Einbeigi, Zakaria, Fernö, Mårten, Hatschek, Thomas, Hedenfalk, Ingrid
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4741767/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26375671
_version_ 1782414065567531008
author Kimbung, Siker
Kovács, Anikó
Danielsson, Anna
Bendahl, Pär-Ola
Lövgren, Kristina
Stolt, Marianne Frostvik
Tobin, Nicholas P.
Lindström, Linda
Bergh, Jonas
Einbeigi, Zakaria
Fernö, Mårten
Hatschek, Thomas
Hedenfalk, Ingrid
author_facet Kimbung, Siker
Kovács, Anikó
Danielsson, Anna
Bendahl, Pär-Ola
Lövgren, Kristina
Stolt, Marianne Frostvik
Tobin, Nicholas P.
Lindström, Linda
Bergh, Jonas
Einbeigi, Zakaria
Fernö, Mårten
Hatschek, Thomas
Hedenfalk, Ingrid
author_sort Kimbung, Siker
collection PubMed
description The relevance of the intrinsic subtypes for clinical management of metastatic breast cancer is not comprehensively established. We aimed to evaluate the prevalence and prognostic significance of drifts in tumor molecular subtypes during breast cancer progression. A well-annotated cohort of 304 women with advanced breast cancer was studied. Tissue microarrays of primary tumors and synchronous lymph node metastases were constructed. Conventional biomarkers were centrally assessed and molecular subtypes were assigned following the 2013 St Gallen guidelines. Fine-needle aspirates of asynchronous metastases were transcriptionally profiled and subtyped using PAM50. Discordant expression of individual biomarkers and molecular subtypes was observed during tumor progression. Primary luminal-like tumors were relatively unstable, frequently adopting a more aggressive subtype in the metastases. Notably, loss of ER expression and a luminal to non-luminal subtype conversion was associated with an inferior post-recurrence survival. In addition, ER and molecular subtype assessed at all tumor progression stages were independent prognostic factors for post-recurrence breast cancer mortality in multivariable analyses. Our results demonstrate that drifts in tumor molecular subtypes may occur during tumor progression, conferring adverse consequences on outcome following breast cancer relapse.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4741767
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher Impact Journals LLC
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-47417672016-03-11 Contrasting breast cancer molecular subtypes across serial tumor progression stages: biological and prognostic implications Kimbung, Siker Kovács, Anikó Danielsson, Anna Bendahl, Pär-Ola Lövgren, Kristina Stolt, Marianne Frostvik Tobin, Nicholas P. Lindström, Linda Bergh, Jonas Einbeigi, Zakaria Fernö, Mårten Hatschek, Thomas Hedenfalk, Ingrid Oncotarget Research Paper The relevance of the intrinsic subtypes for clinical management of metastatic breast cancer is not comprehensively established. We aimed to evaluate the prevalence and prognostic significance of drifts in tumor molecular subtypes during breast cancer progression. A well-annotated cohort of 304 women with advanced breast cancer was studied. Tissue microarrays of primary tumors and synchronous lymph node metastases were constructed. Conventional biomarkers were centrally assessed and molecular subtypes were assigned following the 2013 St Gallen guidelines. Fine-needle aspirates of asynchronous metastases were transcriptionally profiled and subtyped using PAM50. Discordant expression of individual biomarkers and molecular subtypes was observed during tumor progression. Primary luminal-like tumors were relatively unstable, frequently adopting a more aggressive subtype in the metastases. Notably, loss of ER expression and a luminal to non-luminal subtype conversion was associated with an inferior post-recurrence survival. In addition, ER and molecular subtype assessed at all tumor progression stages were independent prognostic factors for post-recurrence breast cancer mortality in multivariable analyses. Our results demonstrate that drifts in tumor molecular subtypes may occur during tumor progression, conferring adverse consequences on outcome following breast cancer relapse. Impact Journals LLC 2015-09-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4741767/ /pubmed/26375671 Text en Copyright: © 2015 Kimbung et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ 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 credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Kimbung, Siker
Kovács, Anikó
Danielsson, Anna
Bendahl, Pär-Ola
Lövgren, Kristina
Stolt, Marianne Frostvik
Tobin, Nicholas P.
Lindström, Linda
Bergh, Jonas
Einbeigi, Zakaria
Fernö, Mårten
Hatschek, Thomas
Hedenfalk, Ingrid
Contrasting breast cancer molecular subtypes across serial tumor progression stages: biological and prognostic implications
title Contrasting breast cancer molecular subtypes across serial tumor progression stages: biological and prognostic implications
title_full Contrasting breast cancer molecular subtypes across serial tumor progression stages: biological and prognostic implications
title_fullStr Contrasting breast cancer molecular subtypes across serial tumor progression stages: biological and prognostic implications
title_full_unstemmed Contrasting breast cancer molecular subtypes across serial tumor progression stages: biological and prognostic implications
title_short Contrasting breast cancer molecular subtypes across serial tumor progression stages: biological and prognostic implications
title_sort contrasting breast cancer molecular subtypes across serial tumor progression stages: biological and prognostic implications
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4741767/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26375671
work_keys_str_mv AT kimbungsiker contrastingbreastcancermolecularsubtypesacrossserialtumorprogressionstagesbiologicalandprognosticimplications
AT kovacsaniko contrastingbreastcancermolecularsubtypesacrossserialtumorprogressionstagesbiologicalandprognosticimplications
AT danielssonanna contrastingbreastcancermolecularsubtypesacrossserialtumorprogressionstagesbiologicalandprognosticimplications
AT bendahlparola contrastingbreastcancermolecularsubtypesacrossserialtumorprogressionstagesbiologicalandprognosticimplications
AT lovgrenkristina contrastingbreastcancermolecularsubtypesacrossserialtumorprogressionstagesbiologicalandprognosticimplications
AT stoltmariannefrostvik contrastingbreastcancermolecularsubtypesacrossserialtumorprogressionstagesbiologicalandprognosticimplications
AT tobinnicholasp contrastingbreastcancermolecularsubtypesacrossserialtumorprogressionstagesbiologicalandprognosticimplications
AT lindstromlinda contrastingbreastcancermolecularsubtypesacrossserialtumorprogressionstagesbiologicalandprognosticimplications
AT berghjonas contrastingbreastcancermolecularsubtypesacrossserialtumorprogressionstagesbiologicalandprognosticimplications
AT einbeigizakaria contrastingbreastcancermolecularsubtypesacrossserialtumorprogressionstagesbiologicalandprognosticimplications
AT fernomarten contrastingbreastcancermolecularsubtypesacrossserialtumorprogressionstagesbiologicalandprognosticimplications
AT hatschekthomas contrastingbreastcancermolecularsubtypesacrossserialtumorprogressionstagesbiologicalandprognosticimplications
AT hedenfalkingrid contrastingbreastcancermolecularsubtypesacrossserialtumorprogressionstagesbiologicalandprognosticimplications