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Intrinsic Subtypes and Gene Expression Profiles in Primary and Metastatic Breast Cancer
Authors
Barbara Adamo
Vincenzo Adamo
+25 more
Joan Albanell
Silvia Antolín
Isabel Blancas
Rosalía Caballero
Eva Carrasco
Juan M. Cejalvo
Javier Cortés
Eduardo Martínez De Dueñas
Patricia Galván
Susana García-Recio
Octavio Burgués Gasión
Roger R. Gomis
Ángel Guerrero-Zotano
Ana Lluch
José I Chacón López-Muniz
Rosella Martinello
Montserrat Muñoz
Paolo Nucíforo
Laia Paré
Vicente Peg
Charles M. Perou
Aleix Prat
Ramon M. Pérez
Federico Rojo
María Vidal
Publication date
1 January 2017
Publisher
Doi
Cite
Abstract
Biological changes that occur during metastatic progression of breast cancer are still incompletely characterized. In this study, we compared intrinsic molecular subtypes and gene expression in 123 paired primary and metastatic tissues from breast cancer patients. Intrinsic subtype was identified using a PAM50 classifier and χ 2 tests determined the differences in variable distribution. The rate of subtype conversion was 0% in basal-like tumors, 23.1% in HER2-enriched (HER2-E) tumors, 30.0% in luminal B tumors, and 55.3% in luminal A tumors. In 40.2% of cases, luminal A tumors converted to luminal B tumors, whereas in 14.3% of cases luminal A and B tumors converted to HER2-E tumors. We identified 47 genes that were expressed differentially in metastatic versus primary disease. Metastatic tumors were enriched for proliferation-related and migration-related genes and diminished for luminal-related genes. Expression of proliferation-related genes were better at predicting overall survival in metastatic disease (OSmet) when analyzed in metastatic tissue rather than primary tissue. In contrast, a basal-like gene expression signature was better at predicting OSmet in primary disease compared with metastatic tissue. We observed correlations between time to tumor relapse and the magnitude of changes of proliferation, luminal B, or HER2-E signatures in metastatic versus primary disease. Although the intrinsic subtype was largely maintained during metastatic progression, luminal/HER2-negative tumors acquired a luminal B or HER2-E profile during metastatic progression, likely reflecting tumor evolution or acquisition of estrogen independence. Overall, our analysis revealed the value of stratifying gene expression by both cancer subtype and tissue type, providing clinicians more refined tools to evaluate prognosis and treatment. Cancer Res; 77(9); 1-9. ©2017 AACR
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Fondo Bibliográfico Digital Institucional
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