ID | 113050 |
Author |
Iwamoto, Takayuki
Okayama University
Katagiri, Toyomasa
Tokushima University
Tokushima University Educator and Researcher Directory
KAKEN Search Researchers
Niikura, Naoki
Tokai University
Miyoshi, Yuichiro
Okayama University
Kochi, Mariko
Okayama University
Nogami, Tomohiro
Okayama University
Shien, Tadahiko
Okayama University
Motoki, Takayuki
Okayama University
Taira, Naruto
Okayama University
Omori, Masako
Okayama University
Tokuda, Yutaka
Tokai University
Fujiwara, Toshiyoshi
Okayama University
Doihara, Hiroyoshi
Okayama University
Gyorffy, Balazs
MTA TTK Lendület Cancer Biomarker Research Group|Semmelweis University
Matsuoka, Junji
Okayama University
|
Keywords | short-term hormone therapy
IHC Ki67
genomic marker
breast cancer
|
Content Type |
Journal Article
|
Description | Background: The purpose of this study was to test whether immunohistochemical (IHC) Ki67 levels after short-term preoperative hormone therapy (post-Ki67) predict similar numbers of patients with favorable prognoses as genomic markers.
Results: Thirty paired cases (60 samples) were enrolled in this study. Post-Ki67 levels were significantly lower than pre-treatment Ki67 levels (P < 0.001). Post-Ki67 predicted more low-risk cases (83.3%, 25/30) than pre-genomic surrogate signature(GSS) (66.7%: 20/30), but the difference in predictive power was not significant (P = 0.233). Proliferation (MKI67, STK15, Survivin, CCNB1, and MYBL2) and estrogen (ER, PGR, BCL2, and SCUBE2) related signatures were significantly downregulated after therapy (P < 0.001 and 0.041, respectively). Materials and Methods: Core needle biopsy specimens of primary breast cancer were collected at Okayama University Hospital from hormone receptor-positive and human epidermal growth factor 2-negative patients that subsequently received two weeks of neoadjuvant hormone therapy. Paired post-treatment specimens from surgical samples were also collected. IHC Ki67 levels and GSS were compared between pre- and post-hormone treatment samples. Changes of gene expression pattern in short-term hormone therapy were also assessed. Conclusions: IHC based post-Ki67 levels may have distinct predictive power compared with the naïve IHC Ki67. Future studies with larger cohorts and longer follow-up periods may be needed to validate our results. |
Journal Title |
Oncotarget
|
ISSN | 19492553
|
Publisher | Impact Journals, LLC
|
Volume | 8
|
Issue | 16
|
Start Page | 26122
|
End Page | 26128
|
Published Date | 2017-02-16
|
Rights | Copyright: Iwamoto et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC-BY)(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
|
EDB ID | |
DOI (Published Version) | |
URL ( Publisher's Version ) | |
FullText File | |
language |
eng
|
TextVersion |
Publisher
|
departments |
Institute of Advanced Medical Sciences
|