One hundred and fifty patients with breast carcinoma were examined to compare axillary node status, estrogen receptor level and cellular DNA content as prognostic indicators. Seventy-four per cent of the patients were postmenopausal and forty per cent had axillary node metastases. Estrogen receptor was measured by isoelectric focusing in polyacrylamide gel. DNA was measured in individual cell nuclei by means of Feulgen-acriflavine-sulphate stained imprints. Fifty-two per cent of the tumors had diploid and/or tetraploid DNA pattern, and the rest aneuploid pattern. Axillary node metastases, aneuploid DNA pattern and low level of estrogen receptor were related to recurrence. When introduced into Cox's proportional hazards procedure, axillary nodes and estrogen receptor level but not DNA pattern remained as significant predictors of recurrence.
Monoclonal antibodies were used for a preoperative analysis of estrogen receptors (ERs) and progesterone receptors (PgRs) in fine-needle aspirates from 44 primary human breast carcinomas. The semiquantitative receptor values obtained in cytologic specimens correlated well with those from enzyme immunoassay analysis on surgically removed tumor tissue (r = 0.74 for PgR; r = 0.75 for ER). Cytologic smears showed a heterogenous tumor cell distribution of ER and PgR in 29 and 23 cases, respectively. The results suggest that measurement of the ER and PgR in cytologic smears is an accurate and reliable technique that can be performed on a minimum amount of tissue.
This report provides a histological review of 264 female primary breast cancers analyzed for estrogen receptor protein (ER). We also describe 5 cases of male breast cancer all of which bound estradiol specifically. Generally the ER concentrations were lower in the tumors of premenopausal women than in those of postmenopausal women. Three types of cancer with specific morphological features were shown to have ER concentrations that differed significantly from the other types of cancer. Medullary and comedo carcinoma had very low and papillary carcinoma very high levels of ER. No obvious trend in ER concentration was found in unspecified ductal carcinoma, colloid carcinoma, nor in lobular carcinoma. A positive correlation was demonstrated between ER content and degree of differentiation in ductal carcinoma. Cancer with lymphoid infiltration generally showed low ER levels.
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