## Abstract Although it is well established that some protein tyrosine kinases have a prognostic value in breast cancer, the involvement of protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) is poorly substantiated for breast tumors. Three of these enzymes (PTP‐gamma, LAR, and PTPL1) are already known to be regu
The gene expression signature of genomic instability in breast cancer is an independent predictor of clinical outcome
✍ Scribed by Jens K. Habermann; Jana Doering; Sampsa Hautaniemi; Uwe J. Roblick; Nana K. Bündgen; Daniel Nicorici; Ulrike Kronenwett; Shruti Rathnagiriswaran; Rama K. R. Mettu; Yan Ma; Stefan Krüger; Hans-Peter Bruch; Gert Auer; Nancy L. Guo; Thomas Ried
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- French
- Weight
- 899 KB
- Volume
- 124
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0020-7136
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Recently, expression profiling of breast carcinomas has revealed gene signatures that predict clinical outcome, and discerned prognostically relevant breast cancer subtypes. Measurement of the degree of genomic instability provides a very similar stratification of prognostic groups. We therefore hypothesized that these features are linked. We used gene expression profiling of 48 breast cancer specimens that profoundly differed in their degree of genomic instability and identified a set of 12 genes that defines the 2 groups. The biological and prognostic significance of this gene set was established through survival prediction in published datasets from patients with breast cancer. Of note, the gene expression signatures that define specific prognostic subtypes in other breast cancer datasets, such as luminal A and B, basal, normal‐like, and ERBB2+, and prognostic signatures including MammaPrint® and Oncotype DX, predicted genomic instability in our samples. This remarkable congruence suggests a biological interdependence of poor‐prognosis gene signatures, breast cancer subtypes, genomic instability, and clinical outcome. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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