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Molecular Alterations Associated with Breast Cancer Mortality
Authors:Laura M. Voeghtly  Kim Mamula  J. Leigh Campbell  Craig D. Shriver  Rachel E. Ellsworth
Affiliation:1. Clinical Breast Care Project, Windber Research Institute, Windber, Pennsylvania, United States of America.; 2. Clinical Breast Care Project, Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine, Windber, Pennsylvania, United States of America.; 3. Clinical Breast Care Project, Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Washington, D.C., United States of America.; The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong,
Abstract:

Background

Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease and patients with similar pathologies and treatments may have different clinical outcomes. Identification of molecular alterations associated with disease outcome may improve risk assessment and treatments for aggressive breast cancer.

Methods

Allelic imbalance (AI) data was generated for 122 invasive breast tumors with known clinical outcome. Levels and patterns of AI were compared between patients who died of disease (DOD) and those with ≥5 years disease-free survival (DFS) using Student t-test and chi-square analysis with a significance value of P<0.05.

Results

Levels of AI were significantly higher in tumors from the 31 DOD patients (28.6%) compared to the 91 DFS patients (20.1%). AI at chromosomes 7q31, 8p22, 13q14, 17p13.3, 17p13.1 and 22q12.3 was associated with DOD while AI at 16q22–q24 was associated with DFS. After multivariate analysis, AI at chromosome 8p22 remained an independent predictor of breast cancer mortality. The frequency of AI at chromosome 13q14 was significantly higher in patients who died ≥5 years compared to those who died <5 years from diagnosis.

Conclusion

Tumors from DOD compared to DFS patients are marked by increased genomic instability and AI at chromosome 8p22 is significantly associated with breast cancer morality, independent of other clinicopathological factors. AI at chromosome 13q14 was associated with late (>5-years post-diagnosis) mortality but not with death from disease within five years, suggesting that patients with short- and long-term mortality may have distinct genetic diseases.
Keywords:
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