How basal are triple-negative breast cancers?
✍ Scribed by François Bertucci; Pascal Finetti; Nathalie Cervera; Benjamin Esterni; Fabienne Hermitte; Patrice Viens; Daniel Birnbaum
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- French
- Weight
- 99 KB
- Volume
- 123
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0020-7136
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
The basal molecular subtype of breast cancer (BC) is defined by the mRNA expression pattern of an intrinsic ∼500‐gene set. It is the most homogeneous subtype in transcriptional terms, and one of the most aggressive in prognostic terms. Clinical trials testing new systemic therapeutic strategies have been launched in basal BCs. Although no proof of evidence has yet been reported, basal tumors are currently assimilated to and selected as triple‐negative (TN) BCs in these trials because of their frequent immunohistochemical (IHC) negativity for hormone and ERBB2 receptors. Here, we have assessed the degrees of correlation and of homogeneity of the TN phenotype (IHC‐based definition) and the basal subtype (gene expression‐based definition). We analyzed 172 TN BCs defined by gene expression profile as basal (123 cases) and nonbasal (49 cases). Conversely, 160 tumors were defined as basal by their gene expression profile and included 123 TN and 37 non‐TN samples. Uni‐ and multivariate analyses revealed that TN BCs represent a more heterogeneous group than basal BCs, including basal and nonbasal tumors very different both at the histoclinical and molecular level, notably for mRNA expression of molecules targeted by specific therapies under evaluation in clinical trials. These results call for caution in the interpretation of ongoing trials and selection of patients in future trials. They also warrant the identification of molecular markers for basal BCs more clinically applicable than gene expression profiles. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract ## BACKGROUND: The results of radiation on the local control of triple receptor‐negative breast cancer (negative estrogen [ER], progesterone [PR], and HER‐2/__neu__ receptors) was studied. ## METHODS: Conservative surgery and radiation were used in 753 patients with T1‐T2 breast canc