Literature DB >> 35101884

Somatic and Germline Genomic Alterations in Very Young Women with Breast Cancer.

Adrienne G Waks1,2, Dewey Kim1,3, Ann H Partridge1,2, Nikhil Wagle1,2,3, Esha Jain1,3, Craig Snow1, Gregory J Kirkner1, Shoshana M Rosenberg1,2, Coyin Oh2, Philip D Poorvu1,2, Kathryn J Ruddy4, Rulla M Tamimi5, Jeffrey Peppercorn2,6, Lidia Schapira7, Virginia F Borges8, Steven E Come2,9, Elena F Brachtel6,10, Ellen Warner11, Laura C Collins2,9.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Young age at breast cancer diagnosis correlates with unfavorable clinicopathologic features and worse outcomes compared with older women. Understanding biological differences between breast tumors in young versus older women may lead to better therapeutic approaches for younger patients. EXPERIMENTAL
DESIGN: We identified 100 patients ≤35 years old at nonmetastatic breast cancer diagnosis who participated in the prospective Young Women's Breast Cancer Study cohort. Tumors were assigned a surrogate intrinsic subtype based on receptor status and grade. Whole-exome sequencing of tumor and germline samples was performed. Genomic alterations were compared with older women (≥45 years old) in The Cancer Genome Atlas, according to intrinsic subtype.
RESULTS: Ninety-three tumors from 92 patients were successfully sequenced. Median age was 32.5 years; 52.7% of tumors were hormone receptor-positive/HER2-negative, 28.0% HER2-positive, and 16.1% triple-negative. Comparison of young to older women (median age 61 years) with luminal A tumors (N = 28 young women) revealed three significant differences: PIK3CA alterations were more common in older patients, whereas GATA3 and ARID1A alterations were more common in young patients. No significant genomic differences were found comparing age groups in other intrinsic subtypes. Twenty-two patients (23.9%) in the Young Women's Study cohort carried a pathogenic germline variant, most commonly (13 patients, 14.1%) in BRCA1/2.
CONCLUSIONS: Somatic alterations in three genes (PIK3CA, GATA3, and ARID1A) occur at different frequencies in young versus older women with luminal A breast cancer. Additional investigation of these genes and associated pathways could delineate biological susceptibilities and improve treatment options for young patients with breast cancer. See related commentary by Yehia and Eng, p. 2209. ©2022 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research.

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Year:  2022        PMID: 35101884     DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-21-2572

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Cancer Res        ISSN: 1078-0432            Impact factor:   12.531


  1 in total

1.  Delineation of Pathogenomic Insights of Breast Cancer in Young Women.

Authors:  Aswathy Mary Paul; Bijesh George; Sunil Saini; Madhavan Radhakrishna Pillai; Masakazu Toi; Luis Costa; Rakesh Kumar
Journal:  Cells       Date:  2022-06-15       Impact factor: 7.666

  1 in total

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