| Literature DB >> 29720211 |
Tanjina Kader1,2,3, Prue Hill4, Emad A Rakha5, Ian G Campbell1,2,6, Kylie L Gorringe7,8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH) is a common diagnosis in the mammographic era and a significant clinical problem with wide variation in diagnosis and treatment. After a diagnosis of ADH on biopsy a proportion are upgraded to carcinoma upon excision; however, the remainder of patients are overtreated. While ADH is considered a non-obligate precursor of invasive carcinoma, the molecular taxonomy remains unknown. MAIN TEXT: Although a few studies have revealed some of the key genomic characteristics of ADH, a clear understanding of the molecular changes associated with breast cancer progression has been limited by inadequately powered studies and low resolution methodology. Complicating factors such as family history, and whether the ADH present in a biopsy is an isolated lesion or part of a greater neoplastic process beyond the limited biopsy material, make accurate interpretation of genomic features and their impact on progression to malignancy a challenging task. This article will review the definitions and variable management of the patients diagnosed with ADH as well as the current knowledge of the molecular landscape of ADH and its clonal relationship with ductal carcinoma in situ and invasive carcinoma.Entities:
Keywords: Atypical ductal hyperplasia; Breast cancer progression; Breast neoplasms; Clonal relationship; Ductal carcinoma in situ; Patient care management
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29720211 PMCID: PMC5932853 DOI: 10.1186/s13058-018-0967-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res ISSN: 1465-5411 Impact factor: 6.466
Fig. 1Forest plot showing histologic category of benign breast lesions and relative risk for breast cancer with 95% confidence interval. RR relative risk
Fig. 2Histological appearance of atypical ductal hyperplasia (40×) (a) and low-grade ductal carcinoma in situ (40×) (b)
Major genetic features of atypical ductal hyperplasia
| Methoda | Number of samples | Number of loci or genomic resolution | Cases with aberration | Average cases altered per locus | Location of copy number gaina | Location of copy number loss/LOH/AIa | SNVa | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LOH | 10P | 2 | 50% | 38.9% | NA | 16q, 17p | NA | [ |
| LOH | 26P | 15 | 42%P | 6.2% | NA | 11p, 13q, 16q, 17p, 17q | NA | [ |
| LOH | 23S | 14 | NA | 15% | NA | 8p,16q,17q | NA | [ |
| LOH | 16S | 22 | 75% | 13% | NA | 1q, 3p, 11p, 11q, 16q, 17p | NA | [ |
| LOH | 31P | 26 | 65% | 6.1% | NA | 8q | NA | [ |
| LOH total | 131 (67P, 64S) | 2–26 | 53%P, 70%S | 15% | NA | 16q (24%), 13q (15%), 17q (12%), 11p (12%), 17p (10%) | NA | |
| CGH | 9P | 5–10 Mb | 55% | NA | 1q, 16p, 11q | 16q, 17p, 20p | NA | [ |
| CGH | 2P | 5–10 Mb | 100% | NA | 1q, 3p, 6p, 10p, 11q, 12q, 13q, 16p, 17q, 20q, 8q, 14q, 15q | 4q, 5q, 1p, 13q, 16q, 17p | NA | [ |
| CGH | 3S | 5–10 Mb | 100% | NA | 3p, 8q, 15q, 16p, 20q, 22q | 13q, 16q | NA | [ |
| CGH | 15P | 5–10 Mb | 93% | NA | 1p, 1q, 2q, 8q, 10p, 17q, 20q, 20p, 2q, Xp | 8p, 9p, 11q, 13q, 14q, 16q, 21q, Xp | NA | [ |
| CGH total | 29 | 80%P, 100%S | NA | 8q, 20q, 16p, 17q, 1q | 16q, 13q, 17p, 8p | NA | ||
| Targeted sequencing | 4 | 130–296 SNV/case | 100% | NA | NA | NA | Lineage heterogeneity | [ |
| WGS | 2 | 1 base pair | 100% | NA | 1q gain early neoplastic event | – | ADH and carcinoma shared SNVs | [ |
| FISHP | 9 | 8 | 100% | 45.6% | 7, 8, 18 | – | – | [ |
| FISHS | 13 | 1 | 54% | NA | Higher | NA | NA | [ |
aLOH loss of heterozygosity, AI allelic imbalance, CGH comparative genomic hybridization, SNV single nucleotide variant, WGS whole-genome sequencing, FISH fluorescence in situ hybridization, NA not available or not applicable. Gains are considered when chromosomal imbalance is > 1.25 and losses are considered when it is < 0.8 of the normal allelic ratio. AI is considered when the imbalance is > 1.33 or < 0.75 of the normal allelic ratio. Any gains or losses are reported when changes occurred in at least one sample of the cohort. P = pure ADH (no synchronous carcinoma), S = ADH with synchronous carcinoma