Basal-Like Breast Cancer Defined by Five Biomarkers Has Superior Prognostic Value than Triple-Negative Phenotype
BC Cancer Agency · University of British Columbia · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Among 3,744 interpretable cases, 17% were basal using the triple-negative definition (10-year BCSS, 6 7%) and 9% were basal using the five-marker method (10-year BCSS, 62%). Likelihood ratio tests of multivariable Cox models including standard clinical variables show that the five-marker panel is significantly more prognostic than the three-marker panel. The poor prognosis of triple-negative phenotype is conferred almost entirely by those tumors positive for basal markers. Among triple-negative patients treated with adjuvant anthracycline-based chemotherapy, the additional positive basal markers identified a cohort of patients with significantly worse outcome.
The expanded surrogate immunopanel of estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, human HER-2, EGFR, and cytokeratin 5/6 provides a more specific definition of basal-like breast cancer that better predicts breast cancer survival.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 38.13
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 41
Authors
8- MCMaggie C.U. CheangCorresponding
BC Cancer Agency, University of British Columbia, Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute
- DVDavid Voduc
BC Cancer Agency, University of British Columbia, Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute
- CBChris Bajdik
BC Cancer Agency
- SLSamuel Leung
BC Cancer Agency, University of British Columbia, Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute
- SMSteven McKinney
BC Cancer Agency, University of British Columbia, Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute
Topics & keywords
- Breast cancer
- Triple-negative breast cancer
- Oncology
- Progesterone receptor
- Internal medicine
- Medicine
- Cytokeratin
- Anthracycline
- Good health and well-being