Parsis, the sole surviving group of followers of Zoroaster who are settled in Bombay, have a fourfold higher incidence of breast cancer than the general population of Greater Bombay. CD44 expression was studied by immunohistochemistry in breast cancers of 50 non-Parsi and 35 Parsi women, 10 normal breast tissues, 10 proliferative lesions and 49 tissues adjoining a tumor mass. Alpha2 and beta1 integrins could be studied in only 42 malignant cases and five normal tissues. The immunohistochemistry results were correlated with other parameters including tumor grade and size, estrogen and progesterone receptor status, lymph node involvement and mitotic index. CD44 was not expressed in normal areas. Benign areas and tissues adjacent to tumor masses showed increased staining. Both Parsi and non-Parsi women showed significantly high CD44 expression. All Parsi ILCs were strongly positive for CD44. In both groups ER negativity was associated with strong CD44 positivity, while mitotic counts correlated with decreased CD44 expression in Parsis but not in non-Parsis. Alpha2 and beta1 integrins were strongly expressed on the basolateral surface of normal epithelium. However, they were downregulated in tumors. In general breast tumor tissues from Parsi and non-Parsi patients did not differ significantly with respect to most parameters. However, among Parsis lymph node involvement and CD44 correlated weakly whereas the mitotic index was inversely correlated with CD44. The reverse was true for non-Parsis. The deviation from the general pattern needs further study based on a large number of samples and appropriate use of splice variants.
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