| Literature DB >> 19772563 |
Heidi Schwarzenbach1, Klaus Pantel, Birthe Kemper, Cord Beeger, Friedrich Otterbach, Rainer Kimmig, Sabine Kasimir-Bauer.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The origin and clinical relevance of circulating cell-free tumor DNA in the blood of cancer patients is still unclear. Here we investigated whether the detection of this DNA is related to bone marrow (BM) micrometastasis and tumor recurrence in breast cancer patients.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19772563 PMCID: PMC2790848 DOI: 10.1186/bcr2404
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res ISSN: 1465-5411 Impact factor: 6.466
Patient characteristics at the time of primary diagnosis of breast cancer
| Patients (%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Total | 81 | 27 (33.5) | 32 (39.5) |
| Age | 56 years (range 33-81) | 24 (41) | |
| Family history | 4 (31) | ||
| negative | 58 (73) | 21 (36) | 4 (50) |
| positive | 13 (17) | 5 (39) | |
| unknown | 8 (10) | 1 (13) | 28 (37) |
| Patient subgroup | |||
| M0 | 76 (94) | 27 (36) | |
| M1 | 5 (6) | 0 (0) | 4 (80) |
| Tumor size | |||
| pT1 | 33 (41) | 14 (42) | 11 (33) |
| pT2 | 39 (48) | 12 (31) | 17 (44) |
| pT3-4 | 9 (11) | 1 (11) | 4 (44) |
| Nodal status | |||
| pN0 | 49 (62) | 19 (39) | 21 (43) |
| pN1-2 | 30 (38) | 8 (27) | 10 (33) |
| Histology | |||
| Ductal | 60 (75) | 23 (38) | 20 (33) |
| Lobular | 10 (12.5) | 3 (30) | 6 (60) |
| Others* | 10 (12.5) | 1 (10) | 6 (60) |
| Grading | |||
| I-II | 51 (65) | 23 (45) | 21 (41) |
| III | 28 (35) | 4 (14) | 10 (36) |
| ER status | |||
| negative | 23 (28.5) | 6 (26) | 9 (39) |
| positive | 58 (71.5) | 21 (36) | 23 (40) |
| PR status | |||
| negative | 29 (36) | 8 (28) | 8 (28) |
| positive | 52 (64) | 19 (37) | 24 (46) |
| CEA | |||
| negative | 69 (86) | 25 (36) | 27 (39) |
| positive | 11 (14) | 2 (18) | 5 (46) |
| CA15-3 | |||
| negative | 67 (84) | 25 (37) | 27 (40) |
| positive | 13 (16) | 2 (15) | 5 (39) |
| Therapy | |||
| BCT | 45 (56) | 20 (44) | 14 (31) |
| Ablation | 36 (44) | 7 (22) | 18 (50) |
*n = 5 tumors were characterized as mixed ductal/lobular carcinomas of the breast; in five tumors histology was unknown. Among these five tumors were three cases of inflammatory breast cancer and one case of a carcinoma sarcoma of the breast with unknown histological subtype.
§total loss of heterozygosity (LOH) detected at all six markers in blood
$ disseminated tumor cells (DTC) detected in bone marrow
BCT = breast conserving therapy; CEA = carcino embryonal antigen; ER = estrogen receptor; PR = progesterone receptor.
Microsatellite markers used for loss of heterozygosity analysis
| Microsatellite | Chromosomal | Tumor suppressor gene | Function |
|---|---|---|---|
| D3S1255 | 3p24.2-25 | unknown | |
| D9S171 | 9p21 | P16 (INK4A) | Regulator of cell cycle |
| D10S1765 | 10q23.3 | PTEN | Regulator of cell growth, metabolism and survival |
| D13S218 | 13q12-13 | BRCA2 | Regulator of cell cycle |
| D16S421 | 16q22-23 | E-cadherin | Epithelial cell adhesion molecule |
| D17S855 | 17q21 | BRCA1 | Regulator of cell cycle |
Figure 1High DNA levels significantly associate with lobular breast cancer. The box plot shows the comparison of serum DNA concentrations (a) in patients with ductal (n = 60), lobular (n = 10) and other (n = 10) breast tumors, and (b) in patients with disseminated tumor cells (DTC)-negative and DTC-positive bone marrow (BM) status. *Statistical significance according to the Mann and Whitney-U test for the non-parametric comparison of two independent variables.
Significant associations between the presence of DTC, serum DNA yields, LOH frequencies at the microsatellite markers and established risk factors determined by the Mann and Whitney-U test
| Elevated | § | § | § | $ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | |||||
| < 55 years | |||||
| > 55 years | no | no | no | no | |
| Tumor size | |||||
| pT1 | |||||
| pT2-4 | no | no | no | no | |
| Nodal status | |||||
| pN0 | |||||
| pN1-2 | no | no | no | no | no |
| Metastasis | |||||
| M0 | |||||
| M1 | no | no | no | no | |
| Histology | |||||
| Ductal | |||||
| Lobular | no | no | no | ||
| others | |||||
| Grading | |||||
| I-II | |||||
| III | no | no | no | no | |
| $DTC | |||||
| Positive | no | no | no | ||
| Negative | |||||
| Recurrence | no | no | no |
*Log rank test
§ loss of heterozygosity (LOH) detected in blood
$ disseminated tumor cells (DTC) detected in bone marrow
Figure 2Distribution of the LOH incidences in blood and primary tumor. Comparison of the loss of heterozygosity (LOH) frequencies detected at six different microsatellite markers (a) in blood serum samples from 81 breast cancer patients, and (b) in serum and tumor samples from 22 patients. The frequency of LOH was calculated by division of the number of LOH with the informative cases for each locus.
Figure 3LOH at the marker D3S1255 and D9S171 significantly correlate with the prevalence of recurrence. Kaplan-Meier analyses of recurrent patients with primary breast cancer (n = 76) with the occurrence of loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at the microsatellite markers (a) D3S1255 and (b) D9S171 at the time of primary diagnosis. Top curves, patients with heterozygosity at the marker D3S1255 (n = 42) and D9S171 (n = 47). Bottom curve, patients with LOH at the marker D3S1255 (n = 8) and D9S171 (n = 5).