Literature DB >> 21709316

A breast cancer meta-analysis of two expression measures of chromosomal instability reveals a relationship with younger age at diagnosis and high risk histopathological variables.

David Endesfelder1, Nicholas McGranahan, Nicolai J Birkbak, Zoltan Szallasi, Maik Kschischo, Trevor A Graham, Charles Swanton.   

Abstract

Breast cancer in younger patients often presents with adverse histopathological features, including increased frequency of estrogen receptor negative and lymph node positive disease status. Chromosomal instability (CIN) is increasingly recognised as an important prognostic variable in solid tumours. In a breast cancer meta-analysis of 2423 patients we examine the relationship between clinicopathological parameters and two distinct chromosomal instability gene expression signatures in order to address whether younger age at diagnosis is associated with increased tumour genome instability. We find that CIN, assessed by the two independently derived CIN expression signatures, is significantly associated with increased tumour size, ER negative or HER2 positive disease, higher tumour grade and younger age at diagnosis in ER negative breast cancer. These data support the hypothesis that chromosomal instability may be a defining feature of breast cancer biology and clinical outcome.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21709316      PMCID: PMC3248181          DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.298

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Oncotarget        ISSN: 1949-2553


INTRODUCTION

Breast cancer in younger women has been shown to be associated with a worse prognosis than in older women [1-3]. Risk factors, including high tumour grade, large tumour size, positive lymph node, and Estrogen receptor (ER) negative status, have been shown to be more prevalent in younger breast cancer patients, leading some to suggest that breast cancer in younger women represents a distinct clinical entity[4]. Chromosomal instability has been widely documented to be associated with poorer prognosis in solid tumours [5] and CIN induced by MAD2 expression promotes rapid tumour relapse following withdrawal of an oncogenic stimulus in animal models [6]. However pre-clinical models have in some cases demonstrated a deleterious impact upon cancer cell survival associated with excessive chromosomal instability initiated by spindle assembly checkpoint inactivation [7] and we and others have shown that aneuploidy has a negative impact upon cell proliferation [8]. Indeed, animal models have also demonstrated that aneuploidy may confer a tumour suppressor effect in cancer prone mice[9]. Cahill and colleagues have suggested that whilst genetic instability may be advantageous under tumour-stromal selection pressures, a threshold may exist beyond which excessive instability becomes deleterious for cancer survival[10]. We reasoned that the association of CIN with poorer prognosis may mask more subtle associations and that extreme CIN predicts improved outcome in contrast to intermediate CIN that might be associated with poorer prognosis. We have previously demonstrated that there may be a non-monotonic relationship between CIN and clinical outcome in a retrospective analysis of breast cancer outcome. We have used a surrogate of CIN status, assessed by CIN70 expression signature, which we have shown acts as a robust surrogate of structural chromosomal complexity measured by CGH and numerical CIN assessed by DNA image cytometry[11]. In this study, we separated patients into quartiles of CIN70 expression and identified that patients with ER negative breast cancer with CIN extreme (4th quartile of CIN70 expression) appear to have improved outcome relative to patients with tumours in the intermediate 3rd quartile which were associated with the worst outcome. In summary, these data confirm the association of CIN with poorer outcome, but also suggest that extreme CIN, exceeding a certain threshold, is associated with improved prognosis. Here we assess the relationship between CIN70 quartile, which we have previously demonstrated correlates with both numerical chromosomal instability and structural chromosomal complexity, and breast cancer histopathological parameters and age at diagnosis. Additionally, we determine the relationship of histopathological parameters with a breast cancer genomic instability signature derived by Habermann et al.[12]. We find evidence for a significant association of both chromosomal instability signatures with high risk histopathological features and importantly with younger age at diagnosis in ER negative patients in a meta-analysis of 2423 patients. These data are concordant with recent suggestions that breast cancer in younger women represents a distinct clinical entity with higher risk molecular features[4].

RESULTS

Comparison of CIN70 quartiles with the 12 gene genome instability signature

We used two different methods to assess chromosomal instability across large cohorts of patients with primary breast cancer for which tumour microarray gene expression data were available. Firstly, we used the CIN70 expression signature derived from a measure of total functional aneuploidy [13]. We have previously shown that this measure correlates with both numerical CIN and structural chromosomal complexity in breast cancer [11]. Secondly, we used a 12-gene genome instability signature defining genomically unstable (GU) breast cancers correlating gene expression data with chromosomal instability in breast cancer measured by DNA image cytometry, previously derived by Habermann and colleagues [12]. In this study, aneuploid genomically unstable breast cancers were defined as having the broadest distribution of DNA content. To compare the two signatures, we derived quartiles of the CIN70 expression scores, as previously described[11], in a meta-analysis of gene expression datasets deriving from 2423 patients with primary breast cancer (Table 1). We assessed the representation of genomically unstable (aGU) and genomically stable (GS) tumours based on the 12 gene signature within each CIN70 expression quartile (Figure 1). We found a significant trend of increasing proportions of genomically unstable tumours with increasing CIN70 quartiles (Figure 1, p < 0.0001), suggesting that both chromosomal instability expression signatures derived through independent methods, are highly correlated.
Table 1

Association of chromosomal instability signatures with clinical parameters. Association of CIN70 quartiles and genomic instability grouped by the 12 gene signature with age, grade, tumour size, lymph node status, ER status and HER2 status.

CIN70 0 – 25%CIN70 25 – 50%CIN70 50 – 75%CIN70 75 – 100%Habermann GSHabermann GU
Age (N, %)
 Median Age (Range)55 (25–88)55 (25–95)55 (24–93)52 (24–88)55 (24 – 88)54 (25 – 95)
Age < 4570 (16)71 (17)89 (21)107 (25)187 (19)150 (21)
Age –45 369 (84)341 (83)335 (79)328 (75)801 (81)572 (79)
Unknown176185181171475238
Grade (N, %)
1147 (39)68 (19)32 (9)10 (3)217 (25)40 (7)
2188 (50)197 (55)128 (37)61 (16)383 (44)191 (33)
340 (11)93 (26)185 (54)311 (81)276 (31)353 (60)
Unknown240239260224587376
ER Status (N, %)
ER Positive515 (89)440 (79)355 (74)194 (34)1156 (85)348 (39)
ER Negative64 (11)115 (21)197 (36)372 (66)204 (15)544 (61)
Unknown3642534010368
HER2 Status
HER2 Positive21 (4)90 (17)127 (24)113 (21)158 (12)193 (26)
HER2 Negative532 (96)438 (83)393 (76)427 (79)1129 (88)661 (74)
Unknown62698566176106
Size (N, %)
0 – 2 cm174 (60)156 (57)110 (43)99 (35)374 (53)165 (42)
> 2cm117 (40)116 (43)146 (57)182 (65)335 (47)226 (57)
Unknown324325349325754569
Lymph Node (N, %)
Positive89 (24)101 (29)95 (30)90 (26)250 (28)125 (26)
Negative278 (76)248 (71)219 (70)253 (74)633 (72)365 (74)
Unknown248248291263580470
Figure 1

Association of CIN70 gene expression signature and the 12 gene genomic instability signature

Proportions of genomically unstable (GU) and genomically stable (GS) patients, derived by the 12-gene genomic instability signature, with CIN70 score quartiles.

Association of CIN70 gene expression signature and the 12 gene genomic instability signature

Proportions of genomically unstable (GU) and genomically stable (GS) patients, derived by the 12-gene genomic instability signature, with CIN70 score quartiles. Association of chromosomal instability signatures with clinical parameters. Association of CIN70 quartiles and genomic instability grouped by the 12 gene signature with age, grade, tumour size, lymph node status, ER status and HER2 status.

CIN status and histopathological parameters

To assess the association of CIN70 expression scores with breast cancer histopathological variables we performed a meta-analysis of 13 primary breast cancer expression datasets (n=2423 patients). We confirmed that tumours of higher grade are enriched with increasing chromosomal instability scores assessed by the CIN70 signature (Figure 2A, p < 0.0001) [13]. Increasing CIN70 quartile correlated with higher risk breast cancer histopathological features including larger tumour size (Figure 2B, p < 0.0001) and the proportion of patients with ER negative (Figure 2C, p < 0.0001) or HER2 positive (Figure 2D, p < 0.0001) breast cancer. We detected no association of CIN70 quartiles with lymph node status (data not shown). In addition, we assessed the association of histopathological parameters with tumours grouped by genomically unstable (GU) or genomically stable (GS) status based on the independently derived 12 gene genomic instability expression signature [12]. Consistent with the results obtained with the CIN70 signature, we observed that tumours of higher grade (Figure 2A, p < 0.0001), larger size (Figure 2B, p = 0.0008), ER negative (Figure 2C, p < 0.0001) or HER2 positive (Figure 2D, p < 0.0001) status are enriched in the GU group. Similar to the CIN70 analysis, no association of lymph node status with GU was observed (data not shown).
Figure 2

Association of genomic instability expression signatures with clinical parameters

Association of CIN70 quartiles (left) and the 12-gene genomic instability signature (right) with tumour grade (Figure 2A), tumour size (Figure 2B), ER status (Figure 2C) and HER2 status (Figure 2D).

Association of genomic instability expression signatures with clinical parameters

Association of CIN70 quartiles (left) and the 12-gene genomic instability signature (right) with tumour grade (Figure 2A), tumour size (Figure 2B), ER status (Figure 2C) and HER2 status (Figure 2D).

Assessment of CIN status with age of breast cancer diagnosis

To address whether there is a relationship between chromosomal instability status and younger age of diagnosis we analysed 8 microarray datasets, for which age data were available, comprising 1710 patients and classified patients into two groups based on age < 45 years (N = 337) and ≥45 years (N = 1373), a standard threshold used to separate breast cancer patients. Firstly, we tested for differences in CIN70 scores between younger and older patients for the combined dataset and found that CIN70 scores and CIN70 expression quartiles were significantly higher in tumours from younger patients (Figure 3A, p < 0.00005). In contrast, we observed no significant association of aGU tumours in younger patients in the combined dataset (Figure 3A, p = 0.3562). We examined ER negative and ER positive breast cancers separately and found a significant association of higher CIN70 expression with younger age in both ER positive and ER negative breast cancer (Figure 3B, ER negative p = 0.026 ER positive p = 0.006 suggesting that the differences in CIN70 scores are independent of ER status. A significant association of younger age with aGU tumours was detected in ER negative breast cancer (Figure 3B, p = 0.0053) but not in ER positive breast cancer (Figure 3B). Finally, we used logistic regression models to test for a significantly higher probability for patients being in the younger patient group as CIN70 scores increase. We found significant differences in 2 out of 9 datasets and a trend for patients with higher CIN70 scores being in the younger patient group in 5 out of 9 datasets (Figure 3C). When all datasets were combined, we found a highly significant association of younger age at diagnosis with increased CIN70 scores (p < 0.0001). In summary, we have identified evidence for the enrichment of CIN, using two independently derived CIN signatures, in tumours from younger patients with ER negative breast cancer.
Figure 3

Association of genomic instability expression signatures with age at diagnosis

Association of age with CIN70 quartiles (left) and the 12-gene genomic instability signature (right) for all patients. (Figure 3B) Association of CIN70 scores and the 12-gene genomic instability signature in ER negative and ER positive breast cancer. (Figure 3C): Forestplot showing the meta-analysis results of a logistic regression assessing the odds ratio for the younger patient group vs. the older patient group as CIN70 scores increase.

Association of genomic instability expression signatures with age at diagnosis

Association of age with CIN70 quartiles (left) and the 12-gene genomic instability signature (right) for all patients. (Figure 3B) Association of CIN70 scores and the 12-gene genomic instability signature in ER negative and ER positive breast cancer. (Figure 3C): Forestplot showing the meta-analysis results of a logistic regression assessing the odds ratio for the younger patient group vs. the older patient group as CIN70 scores increase.

DISCUSSION

Clinical and histopathological analyses in breast cancer have suggested that cancer in younger women appears to be associated with high-risk histopathological features and worse clinical outcome. Chromosomal instability represents one recognised prognostic feature in solid tumours. Given the association of a surrogate measure of CIN, the CIN70 expression signature, with both numerical CIN and structural chromosomal complexity [11], we were able to determine that tumours from younger patients with breast cancer were more likely to be characterised by high CIN70 expression levels in both ER positive and ER negative breast cancer. We also demonstrate, using a second independently derived measure of CIN, the 12 gene genome instability score, that GU/CIN tumours are significantly enriched in ER negative breast cancers from younger patients relative to patients with ER negative breast cancer older than 45 years at diagnosis. However, we observed divergent results for ER positive breast cancers, where tumours from younger patients displayed higher CIN70 scores but were unexpectedly enriched within the GS group derived by the 12-gene genomic instability signature. Taken together, these data suggest that CIN may be a particular feature of younger-onset ER negative breast cancers, that may define outcome in this high-risk group. These data are somewhat surprising given the potential for aneuploidy and genome instability to be generated in aging somatic cells [14-16]. Several lines of evidence support the propensity for somatic cells to generate aneuploidy and mitotic errors with age. Specific changes in gene expression associated with the kinetochore, centromere, microtubule and spindle assembly apparatus have been associated with age-dependent aneuploidy [14, 15]. In addition, continued telomeric attrition and senescence failure may generate mitotically unstable chromosomes through breakage-fusion-bridge cycles [17, 18]. Therefore, from these data, it might be predicted that aneuploidy may be enriched in tumours from older patients. In contrast, we find that total functional aneuploidy, measured by the CIN70 expression signature[13], appears to be enriched in tumours from younger patients with ER negative breast cancer. These data suggest the need to identify an underlying mechanistic basis for this association of younger age at diagnosis with CIN in ER negative breast cancer. Gene expression changes have previously been identified that characterise breast tumours in younger patients. Anders and colleagues investigated the age-specific differences in prognosis, clinicopathologic variables and gene expression patterns between younger (45 years) and older (65 years) women with breast cancer and found a distinct set of genes associated with the younger cohort – suggesting there might exist age-related differences at the molecular level [19]. However, it is difficult to draw conclusions as to whether these differences represent varying prevalence of distinct subtypes and tumour grade between distinct age-cohorts or whether they reflect other age related differences [20]. More recent work by Anders has suggested that the gene expression patterns uniting the younger cohort may relate to an enrichment of basal-like tumours in this patient group [21]. Our data, using two independently derived expression measures of CIN, suggest that a molecular feature of tumours from younger patients with ER negative breast cancers may reflect structural or numerical CIN. Consistent with an association of CIN with higher risk features, we show here in our meta-analysis that ER negative tumours are enriched for CIN, supporting our previous analysis in a smaller cohort [11]. These data are in agreement with data from Habermann and colleagues suggesting that genome instability is a unifying feature of higher risk tumours [12] and tumours from younger patients display higher expression of surrogate of measurements of tumour growth and genomic instability [22]. These data should be interpreted with caution and require validation by more direct measurements of CIN, such as centromeric FISH, rather than our surrogate measure using the CIN70 expression signature. Notably, we observe concordance for the association of younger age with CIN using both CIN expression measures in ER negative but not ER positive breast cancers. The reasons for this discordance remain unclear, however, others have also failed to demonstrate increased structural chromosomal complexity in ER positive tumours from younger patients by CGH [23]. However, evidence that there may be a propensity for increased chromosomal instability in breast cancers from younger patients with ER negative breast cancer suggests the need for such validation approaches and a requirement for a greater understanding of the molecular drivers of structural and numerical chromosomal instability in ER negative breast cancer that may account for this age-related disparity.

METHODS

Microarray Expression Data

Publicly available expression microarray data were obtained for 9 breast cancer datasets[24-30] and “GSE2109”, including 1772 unique patients. Additionally, we used four publicly available neo-adjuvant datasets representing 651 unique patients [31-34].

Data Analysis

For datasets measured on Affymetrix HG-U133A, HT-HG-U133A or HG-U133 Plus 2.0 platforms, we estimated ER and HER2 status by k-medoids clustering of the affymetrix probe sets corresponding to the ESR1 (205225_at) and ERBB2 (216836_s_at) genes according to published methods [35]. We estimated CIN70 scores by computing the mean expression of the probe sets matching the 70 genes comprising the CIN70 signature as described [11, 13]. For microarray platforms where not all 70 genes were present on the array platform, we computed the mean over all CIN70 genes present on the particular platform. For all analyses, CIN70 scores were first estimated for each dataset separately and normalized to a standard normal distribution. The normalized CIN70 scores of all datasets were then combined and CIN70 score quartiles were defined based on the combined CIN70 scores. Additionally, all patients were grouped into genomically unstable (GU) and genomically stable (GS) patients based on a 12 gene genomic instability signature derived by Habermann et al[12]. The expression of all genes matching the 12 gene signature was utilised to cluster the data into GS and GU patients by k-medoids clustering. For further analysis, we used the average expression values of genes matching several probe sets. The cluster membership was derived by comparing the expression direction of the genes in the signature with published results [12]. The To assess the association of the GS and GU groups or CIN70 scores with age, grade, size, lymph node, HER2 and ER status all datasets, where the particular information was available, were combined.

Statistical Analysis

All breast cancer patients where information about age was available were grouped into young (age < 45) and old (age ≥ 45). Tumours were classified into small (0 – 2 cm) and large (> 2 cm). To assess the difference in CIN70 scores between young and old patients in a meta-nalaysis, a logistic regression model was used to obtain odds ratios for each dataset separately. Additionally, we tested for differences between young and old patients in ER negative and ER positive separately with two-sided t-tests. Cochrane-Armitage trend tests were performed to test for an association of increasing CIN70 quartiles with age, pathological complete response, size, lymph node, HER2 and ER status and to test for a trend of grade 3 versus grade 1 and 2 tumours [36]. We used Fishers exact tests for the comparison of proportions in 2x2 contingency tables. All data analysis and statistics was performed in the R statistical environment version 2.11.1.
  35 in total

Review 1.  Impact of aging on DNA methylation.

Authors:  Bruce Richardson
Journal:  Ageing Res Rev       Date:  2003-07       Impact factor: 10.895

2.  Analysis of gene expression patterns and chromosomal changes associated with aging.

Authors:  Jochen B Geigl; Sabine Langer; Simone Barwisch; Katrin Pfleghaar; Gaby Lederer; Michael R Speicher
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2004-12-01       Impact factor: 12.701

3.  Aneuploidy acts both oncogenically and as a tumor suppressor.

Authors:  Beth A A Weaver; Alain D Silk; Cristina Montagna; Pascal Verdier-Pinard; Don W Cleveland
Journal:  Cancer Cell       Date:  2006-12-28       Impact factor: 31.743

4.  A signature of chromosomal instability inferred from gene expression profiles predicts clinical outcome in multiple human cancers.

Authors:  Scott L Carter; Aron C Eklund; Isaac S Kohane; Lyndsay N Harris; Zoltan Szallasi
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2006-08-20       Impact factor: 38.330

5.  Telomere dysfunction promotes non-reciprocal translocations and epithelial cancers in mice.

Authors:  S E Artandi; S Chang; S L Lee; S Alson; G J Gottlieb; L Chin; R A DePinho
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2000-08-10       Impact factor: 49.962

6.  Validation of gene signatures that predict the response of breast cancer to neoadjuvant chemotherapy: a substudy of the EORTC 10994/BIG 00-01 clinical trial.

Authors:  Hervé Bonnefoi; Anil Potti; Mauro Delorenzi; Louis Mauriac; Mario Campone; Michèle Tubiana-Hulin; Thierry Petit; Philippe Rouanet; Jacek Jassem; Emmanuel Blot; Véronique Becette; Pierre Farmer; Sylvie André; Chaitanya R Acharya; Sayan Mukherjee; David Cameron; Jonas Bergh; Joseph R Nevins; Richard D Iggo
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2007-11-19       Impact factor: 41.316

7.  The gene expression signature of genomic instability in breast cancer is an independent predictor of clinical outcome.

Authors:  Jens K Habermann; Jana Doering; Sampsa Hautaniemi; Uwe J Roblick; Nana K Bündgen; Daniel Nicorici; Ulrike Kronenwett; Shruti Rathnagiriswaran; Rama K R Mettu; Yan Ma; Stefan Krüger; Hans-Peter Bruch; Gert Auer; Nancy L Guo; Thomas Ried
Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  2009-04-01       Impact factor: 7.396

8.  A stroma-related gene signature predicts resistance to neoadjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer.

Authors:  Pierre Farmer; Hervé Bonnefoi; Pascale Anderle; David Cameron; Pratyaksha Wirapati; Pratyakasha Wirapati; Véronique Becette; Sylvie André; Martine Piccart; Mario Campone; Etienne Brain; Gaëtan Macgrogan; Thierry Petit; Jacek Jassem; Frédéric Bibeau; Emmanuel Blot; Jan Bogaerts; Michel Aguet; Jonas Bergh; Richard Iggo; Mauro Delorenzi
Journal:  Nat Med       Date:  2009-01-04       Impact factor: 53.440

9.  Gene expression profiling spares early breast cancer patients from adjuvant therapy: derived and validated in two population-based cohorts.

Authors:  Yudi Pawitan; Judith Bjöhle; Lukas Amler; Anna-Lena Borg; Suzanne Egyhazi; Per Hall; Xia Han; Lars Holmberg; Fei Huang; Sigrid Klaar; Edison T Liu; Lance Miller; Hans Nordgren; Alexander Ploner; Kerstin Sandelin; Peter M Shaw; Johanna Smeds; Lambert Skoog; Sara Wedrén; Jonas Bergh
Journal:  Breast Cancer Res       Date:  2005-10-03       Impact factor: 6.466

10.  Age-specific differences in oncogenic pathway deregulation seen in human breast tumors.

Authors:  Carey K Anders; Chaitanya R Acharya; David S Hsu; Gloria Broadwater; Katherine Garman; John A Foekens; Yi Zhang; Yixin Wang; Kelly Marcom; Jeffrey R Marks; Sayan Mukherjee; Joseph R Nevins; Kimberly L Blackwell; Anil Potti
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2008-01-02       Impact factor: 3.240

View more
  4 in total

Review 1.  Cancer chromosomal instability: therapeutic and diagnostic challenges.

Authors:  Nicholas McGranahan; Rebecca A Burrell; David Endesfelder; Marco R Novelli; Charles Swanton
Journal:  EMBO Rep       Date:  2012-06-01       Impact factor: 8.807

2.  Integrating pathology, chromosomal instability and mutations for risk stratification in early-stage endometrioid endometrial carcinoma.

Authors:  Yuan Li; Jiaqi Li; Ensong Guo; Jia Huang; Guangguang Fang; Shaohua Chen; Bin Yang; Yu Fu; Fuxia Li; Zizhuo Wang; Rourou Xiao; Chen Liu; Yuhan Huang; Xue Wu; Funian Lu; Lixin You; Ling Feng; Ling Xi; Peng Wu; Ding Ma; Chaoyang Sun; Beibei Wang; Gang Chen
Journal:  Cell Biosci       Date:  2020-10-22       Impact factor: 7.133

3.  Diversity index as a novel prognostic factor in breast cancer.

Authors:  Yul Ri Chung; Hyun Jeong Kim; Young A Kim; Mee Soo Chang; Ki-Tae Hwang; So Yeon Park
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-09-28

4.  Short somatic alterations at the site of copy number variation in breast cancer.

Authors:  Fumi Murakami; Yumi Tsuboi; Yuka Takahashi; Yoshiya Horimoto; Kaoru Mogushi; Takeshi Ito; Mitsuru Emi; Daisuke Matsubara; Tatsuhiro Shibata; Mitsue Saito; Yoshinori Murakami
Journal:  Cancer Sci       Date:  2020-12-11       Impact factor: 6.518

  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.