2 research outputs found
Are synchronous and metachronous bilateral breast cancers different? An immunohistochemical analysis focused on cell cycle regulation
Introduction. The biology and pathomechanisms of bilateral breast cancers is not fully
understood. We compared the morphological and
immunohistochemical characteristics of primary tumors
in patients with synchronous (sBBC) and metachronous
bilateral breast cancers (mBBC), with special focus on
cell cycle regulation and its correlation with markers
determining intrinsic phenotype.
Methods. Immunohistochemical expression of
p16Ink4A, p21(WAF1/CIP1)
, p27Kip1, p53, cyclin A, cyclin
B, cyclin D1, cyclin D3 and cyclin E was assessed in
tissue microarrays containing primary breast tumor cores
from 113 mBBC and 61 sBBC. Expression of these
markers was correlated with tumor grade and expression
of estrogen receptor (ER), human epidermal growth
factor receptor 2 (HER2) and Ki-67.
Results. In univariate analysis, mBBC demonstrated
higher expression of p16Ink4A (both cytoplasmic:
p=0.002 and nuclear: p=0.014), cyclin A (p=0.024) and
B (cytoplasmic; p=0.015). In multivariate analysis
mBBC were associated with lower expression of p21:
p=0.038 and higher cytoplasmic expression of cyclin B:
p=0.019. Lower ER expression for all BBCs and mBBC,
respectively, was associated with stronger p16
expression (cytoplasmic: both p<0.000001 and nuclear:
p<0.000001, p=0.00002), p53: p<0.000001, p=0.000001,
cyclin A: p=0.00002, p=0.00045, cyclin B (cytoplasmic:
p=0.00037, 0.00015 and nuclear: both p=0.0004) and
cyclin E: p=000003, p<0.000001, and weaker expression
of p27: p=0.00003, p=0.0001 and cyclin D1: both
p<0.000001; for sBBC some of these correlations were
absent. Higher p27 score correlated with lower HER2
expression in sBBC: p=0.018, whereas higher HER2
expression was associated with higher p53: 0.024 and
cyclin E: p=0.048 expression in all BBC and higher
nuclear expression of cyclin B in sBBC: p=0.027.
Higher Ki-67 expression was correlated with higher
expression of p16 (cytoplasmic: p=0.000015, p=0.086,
p=0.0002 and nuclear: p=0.000009, p=0.016,
p=0.00003) in all subsets [all BBC, sBBC (nonsignificant for cytoplasmic score), mBBC, respectively],
p21 (all BBC: p=0.05) and sBBC: p=0.017), p53 (all
BBC: p=0.0003 and mBBC: p=0.0002), cyclin A: all
p<0.000001, cyclin B (cytoplasmic: p<0.000001,
p=0.004, p<0.000001, respectively and nuclear:
p=0.0002, p=0.047, p=0.0026, respectively), cyclin D3
(all BBC: p=0.005 and mBBC: p=0.02) and cyclin E (all
BBC: p<0.000001 and mBBC: p=0.000002), and lower
expression of cyclin D1 (all BBC: p=0.046 and mBBC:
p=0.035) and p27 (sBBC: p=0.048).
Conclusion. Compared to sBBC, mBBC are
characterized by lower expression of p21 and higher
cytoplasmic expression of cyclin B, suggesting its more
aggressive behavior. Correlations between cell-cycle
regulation proteins and markers of breast cancer
phenotype parallel those reported for unilateral breast
cancer