| Literature DB >> 29344009 |
Sadr-Ul Shaheed1, Catherine Tait2, Kyriacos Kyriacou3, Richard Linforth2, Mohamed Salhab2, Chris Sutton1.
Abstract
There has been tremendous progress in detection of breast cancer in postmenopausal women, resulting in two-thirds of women surviving more than 20 years after treatment. However, breast cancer remains the leading cause of cancer-related deaths in premenopausal women. Breast cancer is increasing in younger women due to changes in life-style as well as those at high risk as carriers of mutations in high-penetrance genes. Premenopausal women with breast cancer are more likely to be diagnosed with aggressive tumours and therefore have a lower survival rate. Mammography plays an important role in detecting breast cancer in postmenopausal women, but is considerably less sensitive in younger women. Imaging techniques, such as contrast-enhanced MRI improve sensitivity, but as with all imaging approaches, cannot differentiate between benign and malignant growths. Hence, current well-established detection methods are falling short of providing adequate safety, convenience, sensitivity and specificity for premenopausal women on a global level, necessitating the exploration of new methods. In order to detect and prevent the disease in high risk women as early as possible, methods that require more frequent monitoring need to be developed. The emergence of "omics" strategies over the last 20 years, enabling the characterisation and understanding of breast cancer at the molecular level, are providing the potential for long term, longitudinal monitoring of the disease. Tissue and serum biomarkers for breast cancer stratification, diagnosis and predictive outcome have emerged, but have not successfully translated into clinical screening for early detection of the disease. The use of breast-specific liquid biopsies, such as nipple aspirate fluid (NAF), a natural secretion produced by breast epithelial cells, can be collected non-invasively for biomarker profiling. As we move towards an age of active surveillance, home-based liquid biopsy collection kits are increasingly being applied and these could provide a paradigm shift where NAF biomarker profiling is used for routine breast health monitoring. The current status of established and newly emerging imaging techniques for early detection of breast cancer and the potential for alternative biomarker screening of liquid biopsies, particularly those applied to high-risk, premenopausal women, will be reviewed.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; Breast cancer; Liquid biopsy; Nipple aspirate fluid (NAF); Proteomics
Year: 2018 PMID: 29344009 PMCID: PMC5763528 DOI: 10.1186/s12014-017-9179-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Proteomics ISSN: 1542-6416 Impact factor: 3.988
A semi-quantitative comparison of liquid biopsies that have been used for breast cancer biomarker discovery
| Liquid biopsy | Volume | Accessibility | Discomfort | Reference sample* | Sample preparation | Biomarker concentration | Patient led collection | Convention |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plasma | ++ | +++ | +++ | X | ++++ | ++ | X | +++++ |
| Urine | +++++ | +++++ | + | X | +++ | + | √ | ++++ |
| Saliva | +++ | +++++ | + | X | ++ | + | √ | +++ |
| Ductal lavage | + | + | ++++ | √ | + | +++++ | X | + |
| Random Periareolar Fine Needle Aspiration | + | + | +++++ | √ | ++ | +++++ | X | + |
| Nipple Aspirate Fluid | + | +++(+) | ++ | √ | + | +++++ | √ | ++ |
| + | Small | Invasive | No discomfort/no distress | Extensive processing required | Low | Infrequent use for biomarkers | ||
| +++++ | Large | Easily available | Painful/stressful | Limited process required | High | Frequent use for biomarkers |
(+) Accessibility enhanced by oxytocin nasal spray
*Comparison of healthy and disease sample pairs provides an internal reference
A synopsis of the established approaches for the detection of breast cancer
| Modality | Indication | Sensitivity (%) | Specificity (%) | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Self-examination | Tumour detection | 53.90 | 54–59 | A free and easy way to look for cancer and reduce mortality | Some breast lumps can be missed, cause unnecessary distress | [ |
| Mammography | Tumour detection | 73–86 | 88–93 | Inexpensive, highly portable and does not necessarily require a contrast agent | Discomfort, limited depth penetration, challenging spatial localization, and radiation exposure, False positive and false negative results | [ |
| Ultrasound, especially with contrast enhancement | Detection tumour characterization | 61.40 | 82 | Highly portable, inexpensive molecular microbubble agents possible | Operator dependence contrast agents confined to vascular system | [ |
| Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) | Tumour characterization | 77–99 | 81–99 | Quantification of tumour perfusion and tumour capillary permeability | Confined space, contrast design limited by need for magnetic atom | [ |
| Positron emission tomography | Detection response evaluation characterization | 64–96 | 73–99 | Wide range of molecular imaging probes Tracer imaging without perturbing biologic system | Limited spatial resolution (improved with use of non-contrast computed tomography), some radiation exposure | [ |
| Histopathology | Detection, tumour characterization | 90 | 88 | Differentiating benign and malignant | Discomfort and painful because a surgical procedures required, risk of complications such as infection and bleeding. Can result in over-diagnosis and overtreatment | [ |
A summary of putative biomarkers and their biological function that have been identified in nipple aspirate fluid
| Biomarker (s) | Characteristics | References |
|---|---|---|
| Prostate specific antigen (PSA) | Inversely proportional to disease stage, size of tumour, node status and distant metastases | [ |
| Thomsen–Friedenreich (TFr) and Tn antigens | Predictive for the presence of breast cancer or atypia | [ |
| Testosterone | Predictive in postmenopausal women only | [ |
| Superoxide dismutase (SOD-1) | Involved in cancer initiation and progression by ROS related damages | [ |
| Protein DJ-1 | mRNA level increased but protein level decreased in tissue | [ |
| Cytokines/chemokines | High level of pro-inflammatory C–C and CXC chemokines. | [ |
| Plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1), urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) | Promotes breast cancer invasion and metastasis | [ |
| Serotransferrin protein (TF) and ferritin (FTN) | Proliferation of cancer cells | [ |
| C-reactive protein (CRP) | Serum biomarker for metastasis of different type of cancers | [ |
Fig. 1Multiple reaction monitoring mass spectrometry analysis (n = 3) of a proteotypic peptide of prolactin inducible protein in matched NAF samples from four patients
Fig. 2Paradigm shift in breast cancer detection