Prognostic markers in triple‐negative breast cancer
University of Nottingham · National Health Service · +1 more institution
Abstract
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.
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
- FWCI
- 24.70
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 50
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Triple-negative breast cancer
- Cancer
- Breast cancer
- Oncology
- Triple negative
- Internal medicine
- No poverty