articleCancerDec 4, 2006Closed access

Prognostic markers in triple‐negative breast cancer

University of Nottingham · National Health Service · +1 more institution

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

Triple-negative breast cancer (estrogen receptor-negative, progesterone receptor-negative, and HER2-negative) is a high risk breast cancer that lacks the benefit of specific therapy that targets these proteins.

Methods

In this study, the authors examined a large and well characterized series of invasive breast carcinoma (n = 1944) with a long-term clinical follow-up (median, 56 months) by using tissue microarray. The series were also stained with concurrent immunohistochemical prognostic panels (estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, HER-2, androgen receptor, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), P-cadherin, E-cadherin, and basal (CK5/6, CK14), and p53), to characterize this specific subgroup of breast cancer and to identify prognostic markers that can identify tumors with more aggressive behavior.

Citation impact

1,279
total citations
FWCI
24.70
Percentile
100%
References
50
Citations per year

Authors

6

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Triple-negative breast cancer
  • Cancer
  • Breast cancer
  • Oncology
  • Triple negative
  • Internal medicine
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • No poverty
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