Literature DB >> 19851859

High-risk human papilloma virus infection, tumor pathophenotypes, and BRCA1/2 and TP53 status in juvenile breast cancer.

Gitana Maria Aceto1, Angela Rosaria Solano, Maria Isabel Neuman, Serena Veschi, Annalisa Morgano, Sara Malatesta, Reinaldo Daniel Chacon, Carmen Pupareli, Mercedes Lombardi, Pasquale Battista, Antonio Marchetti, Renato Mariani-Costantini, Ernesto Jorge Podestà.   

Abstract

Juvenile breast cancer is rare and poorly known. We studied a series of five breast cancer patients diagnosed within 25 years of age that included two adolescents, 12- and 15-years-old, and 3 young women, 21-, 21-, and 25-years-old, respectively. All cases were scanned for germline mutations along the entire BRCA1/2 coding sequences and TP53 exons 4-10, using protein truncation test, denaturing high performance liquid chromatography and direct sequencing. Paraffin-embedded primary tumors (available for 4/5 cases), and a distant metastasis (from the 15-years-old) were characterized for histological and molecular tumor subtype, human papilloma virus (HPV) types 16/18 E6 sequences and tumor-associated mutations in TP53 exons 5-8. A BRCA2 germline mutation (p.Ile2490Thr), previously reported in breast cancer and, as compound heterozygote, in Fanconi anemia, was identified in the 21-year-old patient diagnosed after pregnancy, negative for cancer family history. The tumor was not available for study. Only germline polymorphisms in BRCA1/2 and/or TP53 were detected in the other cases. The tumors of the 15- and 12-years-old were, respectively, classified as glycogen-rich carcinoma with triple negative subtype and as secretory carcinoma with basal subtype. The tumors of the 25-year-old and of the other 21-year-old were, respectively, diagnosed as infiltrating ductal carcinoma with luminal A subtype and as lobular carcinoma with luminal B subtype. No somatic TP53 mutations were found, but tumor-associated HPV 16 E6 sequences were retrieved from the 12- and 25-year-old, while both HPV 16 and HPV 18 E6 sequences were found in the tumor of the 15-year-old and in its associated metastasis. Blood from the 15- and 25-year-old, diagnosed with high-stage disease, resulted positive for HPV 16 E6. All the HPV-positive cases were homozygous for arginine at TP53 codon 72, a genotype associated with HPV-related cancer risk, and the tumors showed p16(INK4A) immunostaining, a marker of HPV-associated cancers. Notably menarche at 11 years was reported for the two adolescents, while the 25-year-old was diagnosed after pregnancy and breast-feeding. Our data suggest that high-risk HPV infection is involved in a subset of histopathologically heterogeneous juvenile breast carcinomas associated with menarche or pregnancy and breast-feeding. Furthermore we implicate BRCA2 in a juvenile breast carcinoma diagnosed at 21 years of age, 4 years after an early full-term pregnancy, in absence of cancer family history.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19851859     DOI: 10.1007/s10549-009-0596-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Breast Cancer Res Treat        ISSN: 0167-6806            Impact factor:   4.872


  10 in total

1.  Absence of human papillomavirus in patients with breast cancer in north-west China.

Authors:  Peng Chang; Ting Wang; Qing Yao; Yonggang Lv; Juliang Zhang; Wen Guo; Ling Wang; Jianghao Chen
Journal:  Med Oncol       Date:  2011-04-17       Impact factor: 3.064

2.  Human papillomavirus infection and sporadic breast carcinoma risk: a meta-analysis.

Authors:  Ni Li; Xiaofeng Bi; Yawei Zhang; Ping Zhao; Tongzhang Zheng; Min Dai
Journal:  Breast Cancer Res Treat       Date:  2010-08-26       Impact factor: 4.872

3.  Spectrum of BRCA1/2 variants in 940 patients from Argentina including novel, deleterious and recurrent germline mutations: impact on healthcare and clinical practice.

Authors:  Angela Rosaria Solano; Florencia Cecilia Cardoso; Vanesa Romano; Florencia Perazzo; Carlos Bas; Gonzalo Recondo; Francisco Bernardo Santillan; Eduardo Gonzalez; Eduardo Abalo; María Viniegra; José Davalos Michel; Lina María Nuñez; Cristina Maria Noblia; Ignacio Mc Lean; Enrique Diaz Canton; Reinaldo Daniel Chacon; Gustavo Cortese; Eduardo Beccar Varela; Martín Greco; María Laura Barrientos; Silvia Adela Avila; Hector Daniel Vuotto; Antonio Lorusso; Ernesto Jorge Podesta; Oscar Gaspar Mando
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2016-07-24

4.  Presence of human papillomavirus DNA in breast cancer: a Spanish case-control study.

Authors:  Silvia Delgado-García; Juan-Carlos Martínez-Escoriza; Alfonso Alba; Tina-Aurora Martín-Bayón; Hortensia Ballester-Galiana; Gloria Peiró; Pablo Caballero; Jose Ponce-Lorenzo
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2017-05-08       Impact factor: 4.430

5.  Almost Complete Lack of Human Cytomegalovirus and Human papillomaviruses Genome in Benign and Malignant Breast Lesions in Shiraz, Southwest of Iran

Authors:  Sahar Bakhtiyrizadeh; Seyed Younes Hosseini; Ramin Yaghobi; Aliakbar Safaei; Jamal Sarvari
Journal:  Asian Pac J Cancer Prev       Date:  2017-12-29

Review 6.  Insights of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) pandemic: a current review.

Authors:  Jyoti Choudhary; Shrivardhan Dheeman; Vipin Sharma; Prashant Katiyar; Santosh Kumar Karn; Manoj Kumar Sarangi; Ankit Kumar Chauhan; Gaurav Verma; Nitin Baliyan
Journal:  Biol Proced Online       Date:  2021-02-01       Impact factor: 3.244

Review 7.  Role of viruses in the development of breast cancer.

Authors:  Kenneth Alibek; Ainur Kakpenova; Assel Mussabekova; Marzhan Sypabekova; Nargis Karatayeva
Journal:  Infect Agent Cancer       Date:  2013-09-02       Impact factor: 2.965

8.  BRCA1 And BRCA2 analysis of Argentinean breast/ovarian cancer patients selected for age and family history highlights a role for novel mutations of putative south-American origin.

Authors:  Angela Rosaria Solano; Gitana Maria Aceto; Dreanina Delettieres; Serena Veschi; Maria Isabel Neuman; Eduardo Alonso; Sergio Chialina; Reinaldo Daniel Chacón; Mariani-Costantini Renato; Ernesto Jorge Podestá
Journal:  Springerplus       Date:  2012-09-25

9.  BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations and clinical interpretation in 398 ovarian cancer patients: comparison with breast cancer variants in a similar population.

Authors:  Florencia C Cardoso; Susana Goncalves; Pablo G Mele; Natalia C Liria; Leonardo Sganga; Ignacio Diaz Perez; Ernesto J Podesta; Angela R Solano
Journal:  Hum Genomics       Date:  2018-08-13       Impact factor: 4.639

Review 10.  Landscape of Germline Mutations in DNA Repair Genes for Breast Cancer in Latin America: Opportunities for PARP-Like Inhibitors and Immunotherapy.

Authors:  Laura Keren Urbina-Jara; Augusto Rojas-Martinez; Emmanuel Martinez-Ledesma; Dione Aguilar; Cynthia Villarreal-Garza; Rocio Ortiz-Lopez
Journal:  Genes (Basel)       Date:  2019-10-10       Impact factor: 4.096

  10 in total

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