Germline BRCA1 Mutations and a Basal Epithelial Phenotype in Breast Cancer
Jewish General Hospital · McGill University Health Centre · +1 more institution
Abstract
A basal epithelial phenotype is found in not more than 15% of all invasive breast cancers. Microarray studies have shown that this phenotype is associated with breast cancers that express neither estrogen receptor (ER) nor erbB-2 (HER2/neu) (i.e., ER/erbB-2-negative tumors). The ER/erbB-2- negative phenotype is also found in breast cancers occurring in BRCA1 mutation carriers (i.e., BRCA1-related breast cancers). We tested the hypothesis that BRCA1-related breast cancers are more likely than non-BRCA1/ 2-related breast cancer to express a basal epithelial phenotype. Among 292 breast cancer specimens previously analyzed for ER, erbB-2, p53, and germline mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2, we identified 76 that did…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.76
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 32
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Breast cancer
- Cytokeratin
- Estrogen receptor
- Germline
- Phenotype
- Germline mutation
- Male breast cancer
- Cancer research
- Good health and well-being