Summary The aim of this study was to assess relationships between Bcl-2 expression, response to chemotherapy and a number of pathological and biological tumour parameters in premenopausal, lymph node-negative breast cancer patients. Expression of Bcl-2 was determined using immunohistochemistry on paraffin-embedded sections in a series of 441 premenopausal, lymph node-negative breast cancers of patients randomised to receive perioperative chemotherapy (5-fluorouracil, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide) or no perioperative chemotherapy. Immunohistochemistry of Bcl-2 was evaluated by scoring both staining intensity (0-3) and number of positive cells (0-2). Using these scores tumours were grouped into categories 0-6. It was found that 9.2% of the tumours were completely negative (0), 17.2% weakly (1 + 2), 41.6% moderately (3 + 4) and 31.9% strongly positive (5+6) for Bcl-2. A positive correlation was found between high Bcl-2 expression and oestrogen (P<0.001) and progesterone receptor positivity (P<0.001) and low tumour grade (P<0.001), whereas high Bcl-2 expression was negatively correlated with p53 (P<0.001) and c-erb-B-2 positivity (P<0.001), high Ki-67 index (P<0.001), mitotic index (P<0.001) and large tumour size (P=0.006). Patients with tumours expressing high levels of Bcl-2 (overall score 3-6) had a significantly better disease-free (P=0.004) and overall (P=0.009) survival. However, in a multivariate model this association no longer remained significant. There was a trend for an effect of adjuvant chemotherapy on disease-free survival both for patients with Bcl-2-positive (HR-0.61, 95% CI 0.35-1.06, P=0.07) and negative (HR=0.55, 95% CI 0.27-1.12, P=0.09) breast tumours at a median follow-up of 49 months. The level of Bcl-2 expression does not seem to predict response to perioperative chemotherapy in premenopausal, lymph node-negative breast cancer patients. High levels of Bcl-2 are preferentially expressed in well-differentiated tumours and are associated with favourable prognosis. However, Bcl-2 expression is not an independent prognostic factor in this patient series.
Introduction: Frequently, patients with locally advanced or metastatic NSCLC are screened for mutations and fusions. In most laboratories, molecular workup includes a multitude of tests: immunohistochemistry (ALK, ROS1, and programmed death-ligand 1 testing), DNA sequencing, in situ hybridization for fusion, and amplification detection. With the fast-emerging new drugs targeting specific fusions and exon-skipping events, this procedure harbors a growing risk of tissue exhaustion.
p53 accumulation was associated with a poor response to one perioperative course of FAC chemotherapy. Ki-67, ER-IA, and age are important prognostic factors in premenopausal women with node-negative breast cancer.
The RPS6KB1 gene is amplified and overexpressed in approximately 10% of breast carcinomas and has been found associated with poor prognosis. We studied the prognostic significance of P70 S6 kinase protein (PS6K) overexpression in a series of 452 nodenegative premenopausal early-stage breast cancer patients (median follow-up: 10.8 years). Immunohistochemistry was used to assess PS6K expression in the primary tumour, which had previously been analysed for a panel of established prognostic factors in breast cancer. In a univariate analysis, PS6K overexpression was associated with worse distant disease-free survival as well as impaired locoregional control (HR 1.80, P 0.025 and HR 2.50, P 0.006, respectively). In a multivariate analysis including other prognostic factors, PS6K overexpression remained an independent predictor for poor locoregional control (RR 2.67, P 0.003). To our knowledge, P70 S6 kinase protein is the first oncogenic marker that has prognostic impact on locoregional control and therefore may have clinical implications in determining the local treatment strategy in early-stage breast cancer patients. The treatment of breast cancer is guided by risk factors. Approximately 70% of all node-negative breast cancer patients can be cured by locoregional therapy alone. This automatically implies that the remaining 30% of these patients will develop a recurrence despite adequate locoregional therapy. Currently, treatment strategy in breast cancer is based upon tumour stage, grade, and hormone receptor status. Additional prognostic factors are greatly needed, first to select those patients who might benefit from adjuvant systemic therapy and second to optimise locoregional therapy in order to avoid locoregional recurrences.The prognostic significance of a considerable number of tumour markers has already been investigated but to date, none of these factors can be used to guide the treatment of primary breast cancer.A recent study by Barlund et al (2000a) demonstrated that amplification of a putative tumour marker called P70 S6 kinase protein (PS6K) might be associated with poor outcome in breast cancer. In addition, the authors reported that RPS6KB1 gene amplification and PS6K overexpression are significantly correlated.The RPS6KB1 gene is located at 17q23 and amplified in approximately 10% of all primary breast cancer cases. PS6K is a ribosomal protein that is involved in the progression from the G1 to S phase of the cell cycle. It is rapidly activated in response to mitogenic stimuli, for example, growth factors, cytokines, and oncogene products (Grove et
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