Literature DB >> 17410359

NY-BR-1 protein expression in breast carcinoma: a mammary gland differentiation antigen as target for cancer immunotherapy.

Jean-Philippe Theurillat1, Ursina Zürrer-Härdi, Zsuzsanna Varga, Martina Storz, Nicole M Probst-Hensch, Burkhardt Seifert, Mathias K Fehr, Daniel Fink, Soldano Ferrone, Bernhard Pestalozzi, Achim A Jungbluth, Yao-Tseng Chen, Dirk Jäger, Alexander Knuth, Holger Moch.   

Abstract

NY-BR-1 is a recently identified differentiation antigen of the mammary gland. To use NY-BR-1 for T-cell-based immunotherapy, analysis of its co-expression with HLA class I antigens is required. In the present tissue microarray study, primary breast cancers (n = 1,444), recurrences (n = 88), lymph node (n = 525) and distant metastases (n = 91) were studied for NY-BR-1 expression using a novel monoclonal antibody. NY-BR-1 expression was compared with prognosis, estrogen receptor, HER2-status, EGFR and HLA class I antigen expression. NY-BR-1 was more frequently expressed in grade 1 (82%) than in grade 2 (69%) and grade 3 (46%) carcinomas (P < 0.0001). Moreover, NY-BR-1 expression correlated directly with estrogen receptor expression (P < 0.0001) and inversely correlated with HER2-status and EGFR expression (P < 0.0001 for both). Considering high expression level of co-expression, 198/1,321 (15%) primary breast carcinomas and 4/65 (6%) distant metastases expressed NY-BR-1 and HLA class I, suggesting that active immunotherapy can be applied to about 10% of breast cancer patients. Survival analysis showed an association of NY-BR-1 expression with better patient outcome (P = 0.015). No difference between NY-BR-1 expression of primary tumors and metastases could be found, indicating that the presence of NY-BR-1 in metastases can be deduced from their corresponding primary. Forty-three paired biopsies taken from patients before and after chemotherapy suggest that NY-BR-1 expression is not influenced by preceding chemotherapy (kappa = 0.89, P < 0.0001). In summary, the co-expression of NY-BR-1 with HLA class I antigens and its expression in metastases without modification by chemotherapy suggest that NY-BR-1 targeted immunotherapy represents a viable strategy in addition to other targeted cancer drug therapies of breast cancer.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17410359     DOI: 10.1007/s00262-007-0316-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Immunol Immunother        ISSN: 0340-7004            Impact factor:   6.968


  17 in total

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3.  Immunohistochemical Analysis of the Expression of Breast Markers in Basal-like Breast Carcinomas Defined as Triple Negative Cancers Expressing Keratin 5.

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Review 6.  Breast cancer stem cells: implications for therapy of breast cancer.

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7.  The Discovery of Novel Biomarkers Improves Breast Cancer Intrinsic Subtype Prediction and Reconciles the Labels in the METABRIC Data Set.

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8.  Homogeneous MGMT immunoreactivity correlates with an unmethylated MGMT promoter status in brain metastases of various solid tumors.

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Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2008-01-15       Impact factor: 7.640

10.  Cancer testis antigens and NY-BR-1 expression in primary breast cancer: prognostic and therapeutic implications.

Authors:  Dimitrios Balafoutas; Axel zur Hausen; Sebastian Mayer; Marc Hirschfeld; Markus Jaeger; Dominik Denschlag; Gerald Gitsch; Achim Jungbluth; Elmar Stickeler
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