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Query: UNIPROT:P04626 (
erbB-2
)
5,251
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Invasive micropapillary carcinoma (IMC) of the breast is a rare variant of
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
that has been associated with an extremely high incidence of lymph node metastases. Follow-up studies on patients with pure IMC breast cancer histology have been limited by low patient numbers, short duration of follow-up, and a lack of multivariate analyses. Using invasive breast cancers from 1,287 patients (median follow-up, 13.8 years), histological review showed 21 cases (1.7%) with pure IMC histology. Pure IMC histology was associated with high-grade histology (P = .04), metastases to regional lymph nodes (P < .001), a high mitotic index (P = .02), and
erbB-2
immunopositivity (P = .007). Univariate analyses showed a strong association between IMC histology and shortened survival (disease-free survival [DFS], P = .0052; median, 44 months for IMC and 63 months for non-IMC; disease-specific survival [DSS], P = .014; medians, 71 and 78 for IMC and non-IMC, respectively) only in an analysis of all patients. Because only 1 case of node-negative IMC histology was available, univariate analysis of IMC histology was performed only on node-positive patients without significance. Multivariate analyses comparing IMC histology with either node-positive or all other breast cancers failed to show independent prognostic significance. In summary, breast cancer patients with pure IMC histology showed survival rates similar to those of other patients with equivalent numbers of lymph node metastases.
...
PMID:Invasive micropapillary carcinoma of the breast: a prognostic study. 1066 24
The prognostic role of ploidy status, S phase fraction, estrogen and progesterone receptor status, and the expression of p53 and
erbB-2
protein in male breast carcinoma (MBC) remains controversial. The primary objective of this study was to determine which of the common prognostic factors for female breast cancer predict prognosis in MBC. A secondary objective was to assess the impact of comorbid illnesses on survival. A retrospective review of demographic data, surgical treatment, pathological staging, adjuvant treatment and follow-up was completed for 16 patients with MBC (1 intraductal and 15 invasive). Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue was processed for ploidy, S phase fraction, and immunohistochemical detection of estrogen and progesterone receptors plus expression of p53 and
erbB-2
protein. Six of 15 patients with
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
are currently alive without evidence of disease and a median survival of 61 months. Nine patients died after a median survival of 52 months, with 6 patients having no evidence of recurrent breast cancer. Two of 3 deaths secondary to advanced breast cancer occurred in patients who initially presented with T4 lesions and were staged IIIB. Two of 15 tumors were
erbB-2
positive, whereas only 1 tested weakly positive for p53 protein. We observed that MBCs express
erbB-2
and p53 proteins infrequently. Neither ploidy status, S phase fraction, nor
erbB-2
/p53 status provided any apparent improvement in establishing prognosis beyond routine pathological staging. Advanced TNM stage was associated with diminished survival. The majority of MBCs express estrogen and progesterone receptors. Survivals in MBC were reduced in association with comorbid medical conditions.
...
PMID:Prognostic variables in male breast cancer. 1082 54
One hundred and twelve
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
of breast were studied by the standard avidinbiotin complex immunoperoxidase method on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections, using a monoclonal antibody to c-
erbB-2
oncoprotein. The same tumours were assessed and scored according to the Bloom and Richardson criteria into three histological grades. The distribution of tumours according to grade were: 8 Grade I, 34 Grade II and 70 Grade III. Forty-three (38.4%) tumours showed positive membrane staining for c-
erbB-2
oncoprotein. These comprised 7 Grade II and 36 Grade III tumours with c-
erbB-2
immunopositivity rates of 20.6% and 51.4% respectively. The oncoprotein was not expressed by Grade I tumours. This study shows a good correlation between c-
erbB-2
expression and histological grade, a known prognostic indicator of invasive breast carcinoma. Because the c-
erbB-2
oncogene has extensive structural homology to the epidermal growth factor receptor gene, its overexpression can be expected to result in more aggressive tumour behaviour. While it may be regarded as another indicator of poor prognosis breast cancers, its value in the selection of carcinomas less responsive to hormonal therapy and those more suitable for immunotherapy than chemotherapy has been mooted but remains to be clarified.
...
PMID:Correlation between histological grade and c-erbB2 oncoprotein overexpression in infiltrating ductal carcinoma of breast. 1087 40
Eighty-six
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
of breast were studied by the standard avidin-biotin complex immunoperoxidase method on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections, for oestrogen receptor (ER) protein and c-
erbB-2
oncoprotein expression. They were categorized according to the modified Bloom and Richardson criteria into three histological grades. 21% tumours were ER positive while 44% were c-
erbB-2
positive. Of ER positive tumours, 33.3% were c-
erbB-2
positive whereas the c-
erbB-2
positivity rate was much higher (47.1%) in ER negative tumours. Only 16% of c-
erbB-2
positive tumours were ER positive while 25% of c-
erbB-2
negative tumours were ER positive. This negative relationship between ER and c-
erbB-2
expression was statistically significant (Mc Nemar's test, p < 0.005). The ER positivity rate did not vary significantly with histological grade. However, c-
erbB-2
overexpression was significantly more prevalent in grade III tumours compared with grade I and II tumours (Chi-square test, p < 0.005). Since the c-
erbB-2
oncogene has extensive structural homology to the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) gene, we expect that c-
erbB-2
oncoprotein would share functional similarities with EGFR leading to both loss of oestrogen receptor and poor prognosis in breast cancer. Its overexpression can be expected to relate to more aggressive tumour proliferation and may explain its correlation with high histological grade, a known indicator of aggressive cancer behaviour. As there is no indication that ER protein activity contributes to advancement in histological grade, it would appear that cellular dedifferentiation precedes ER loss during malignant transformation. It has been mooted that ER positive breast cancers which also show c-
erbB-2
oncoprotein overexpression have a poorer response to hormonal therapy. The use of this parameter in the routine assessment of breast cancer patients may identify subsets of patients for more aggressive therapy.
...
PMID:C-erbB-2 oncoprotein amplification in infiltrating ductal carcinoma of breast relates to high histological grade and loss of oestrogen receptor protein. 1087 59
The relevance of 8 contemporary classification and grading systems for ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) of the breast was examined in 100 tumors by comparing DCIS grade with grade of the concurrent
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
(
IDC
). Besides tumor size and nodal status, the immunohistochemical parameters in both lesions were compared, including estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, c-
erbB-2
protein, E-cadherin, vimentin, Ki-67 (MIB1), and p27. Nuclear grading of DCIS alone or in combination with architectural pattern and necrosis showed the best correlation with grade of the invasive component. There also was a positive correlation between every biologic marker expressed in DCIS and in the concurrent
IDC
, supporting a clonal relationship. Biologic markers varied between the different grades of DCIS. DCIS is heterogeneous, and the progression of DCIS to
IDC
may be from low-grade DCIS to low-grade
IDC
and high-grade DCIS to high-grade
IDC
. This concept is different from the conventional model held for intraepithelial neoplasia in the cervix, vulva, vagina, and skin, in which there is increasing severity of in situ atypia (dysplasia) before the development of stromal invasion.
...
PMID:Biologic markers in ductal carcinoma in situ and concurrent infiltrating carcinoma. A comparison of eight contemporary grading systems. 1193 45
The
HER-2/neu
proto-oncogene amplification or oncoprotein overexpression is an important prognostic factor and a predictive factor for resistance to endocrine therapy and adjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancers. Moreover, it is an entry criterion in the assessment of patients for whom Herceptin (Trastuzumab) treatment is considered. The overexpression rate of
HER-2/neu
oncoprotein has been identified in 10% to 40% of human breast cancers. In Taiwan, a higher grade of pathobiologic characteristics of familial breast cancer was also noted than that found in the non-familial group. It is worthwhile to evaluate whether the overexpression is more frequent in familial breast cancers. Fifty-six familial and 111 non-familial breast cancers were studied between 1990 and 1999 to assess both the overexpression of
HER-2/neu
oncoprotein immunohistochemically and the correlation with the histological type, grade and stage of breast carcinoma. The overexpression rate is higher in the familial breast cancer group (50.0%) when compared with non-familial breast cancer group (36.9%), which did not prove to be statistically significant (P = 0.1068). However, when the infiltrating ductal carcinomas of both groups are compared, it is statistically significant (52.3% vs. 33.7%, P = 0.0429). Overexpression correlated with node status and histological grade of infiltrating ductal carcinomas in non-familial and overall breast cancers. It also correlated with nuclear pleomorphism and mitotic counts, but not tubule formation or tumor size. All 3 cases of Paget's disease revealed overexpression, whereas all 12 cases of mucinous and one case of metaplastic carcinoma and one case of medullary carcinoma were negative. The overexpression rate was higher both in familial and non-familial intraductal carcinomas (57.1% vs. 73.3%, P = 0.4716). No statistical difference was identified between the 2 subsets. A case of
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
combined with intraductal carcinoma revealed heterogeneous staining in the component of ductal carcinoma in situ, while the invasive component did not. This suggests that overexpression decreases within individual tumors as they evolve from in situ to invasive lesioins. The
HER-2/neu
may imply a different role in intraductal carcinoma, Paget's disease and invasive duct carcinoma. Although the overexpression rate of
HER-2/neu
oncoprotein of familial breast cancer was not significantly higher than that of the non-familial group, it is appropriate to evaluate the rate of
HER-2/neu
overexpression according to the histological type of breast cancers from familial breast cancer and non-familial breast cancer. The prognoses will be needed for future evaluation.
...
PMID:Expression of HER-2/NEU oncoprotein in familial and non-familial breast cancer. 1141 60
The aim of this study was to determine the chemosensitivity of infiltrating lobular breast carcinoma (ILC) in comparison with
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
(
IDC
). Between 1987 and 1995, 457 patients with invasive T2>3 cm-T4 breast carcinomas were treated with primary chemotherapy (CT), surgery, radiation therapy. Clinical response, the possibility of breast preservation, pathological response and survival were evaluated according to the histological type. In order to evaluate the biological differences between ILC and
IDC
patients and their implication with regard to tumour chemosensitivity, additional immunohistochemical stainings (oestrogen receptor (ER), Bcl2, p53, c-
erbB-2
and Ki67) were performed on 129 pretherapeutical specimens. 38 (8.3%) ILC were diagnosed by core needle biopsy before CT. ILC was an independent predictor of a poor clinical response (P=0.02) and ineligibility for breast-conserving surgery after neoadjuvant chemotherapy (P=0.03). Histological and biological factors predicting a poor response to CT (histological grade, ER, Ki67 and p53 status) were more frequent in ILC than in
IDC
patients. After a median follow-up of 98 months (range: 3-166), the low chemosensitivity of ILC did not result in a survival disadvantage. Our results demonstrate that ILC achieved a lower response to CT than
IDC
because of their immunohistochemical profile. Preoperative CT did not allow a high rate of conservative treatment for ILC and therefore the use of neoadjuvant CT for ILC patients should be questioned.
...
PMID:The poor responsiveness of infiltrating lobular breast carcinomas to neoadjuvant chemotherapy can be explained by their biological profile. 1474 51
In this study, we performed high-resolution array comparative genomic hybridization with an array of 4153 bacterial artificial chromosome clones to assess copy number changes in 44 archival breast cancers. The tumors were flow sorted to exclude non-tumor DNA and increase our ability to detect gene copy number changes. In these tumors, losses were more frequent than gains, and gains in 1q and loss in 16q were the most frequent alterations. We compared gene copy number changes in the tumors based on histologic subtype and estrogen receptor (ER) status, i.e., ER-negative
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
, ER-positive
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
, and ER-positive infiltrating lobular carcinoma. We observed a consistent association between loss in regions of 5q and ER-negative
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
, as well as more frequent loss in 4p16, 8p23, 8p21, 10q25, and 17p11.2 in ER-negative
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
compared with ER-positive
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
(adjusted P values < or = 0.05). We also observed high-level amplifications in ER-negative
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
in regions of 8q24 and 17q12 encompassing the c-myc and c-
erbB-2
genes and apparent homozygous deletions in 3p21, 5q33, 8p23, 8p21, 9q34, 16q24, and 19q13. ER-positive
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
showed a higher frequency of gain in 16p13 and loss in 16q21 than ER-negative
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
. Correlation analysis highlighted regions of change commonly seen together in ER-negative
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
. ER-positive infiltrating lobular carcinoma differed from ER-positive
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
in the frequency of gain in 1q and loss in 11q and showed high-level amplifications in 1q32, 8p23, 11q13, and 11q14. These results indicate that array comparative genomic hybridization can identify significant differences in the genomic alterations between subtypes of breast cancer.
...
PMID:Array comparative genomic hybridization analysis of genomic alterations in breast cancer subtypes. 1557 60
Metachronous or synchronous breast carcinoma following or co-existing with colorectal carcinoma are well recognised clinicopathological entities, and the risk of developing both possibly underlines the similarities in carcinogenesis pathways for these carcinomas. We present a 60-year-old housewife with a history of a treated primary colon carcinoma (Duke's C) 15 years previously. Six months ago, during the follow-up care a small sub-areolar lesion was determined in a mammogram. A lumpectomy was performed under local anaesthesia, which revealed an
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
(6 mm in greatest diameter). Immuno-histochemical assays for oestrogen and progesterone receptors and
c-erb B2
ongoprotein were performed. Axillary lymphadenectomy showed 1/11 positive node. She received adjuvant radiotherapy and hormone manipulation. To date, seven months later she is disease free. The aim of this report is to emphasise the risk of metachronous second malignancy of breast or colorectal carcinoma following colorectal carcinomas. A second primary colonic malignancy following breast primary carcinoma is more frequent than inverse clinical form.
...
PMID:Metachronous breast carcinoma (second malignancy), following "cure" from colorectal carcinoma. 1565 96
The
HER-2/neu
gene is a proto-oncogene that is amplified in 10-30% of breast cancers. New drugs for targeted therapy, such as Herceptin, are effective for patients with
HER-2/neu
-positive tumors, making it necessary to have a noncostly and accurate method to assess
HER-2/neu
status. We studied the correlation of findings made by fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) and immunohistochemistry (IHC) staining and the possibility of combining IHC and other clinicopathologic characteristics of breast tumors to predict FISH-determined
HER-2/neu
status. The clinicopathologic characteristics analyzed were the size of the tumor, p53, lymph-vascular invasion, estrogen/progesterone receptors (ER/PR), tumor grade, axillary lymph node status, and patient age. A total of 199 cases of invasive breast cancer studied at the UCLA Pathology Laboratory during 2003 were included in this study. Tumors with IHC 0, 1+, 2+, and 3+ scores were found to be FISH positive in 3.5%, 6.4%, 25.7%, and 81.5% of the respective groups. Our study showed a strong association between the FISH-negative and IHC scored 0 and 1+ tumors, suggesting that the FISH test may not be necessary in these cases (p<0.0001). Although the concordance between IHC 3+ and FISH positive is high, 18% of the patients with overexpression of
HER-2/neu
fail to show gene amplification by FISH.
HER-2/neu
positivity was found to be proportionally associated with increasing grade in
infiltrating ductal carcinoma
(p<0.0001). p53-positive tumors are more likely to be
HER-2/neu
amplified (p=0.0003). Tumors that are negative for ER/PR are also associated with
HER-2/neu
positivity by FISH (31.15%, p=0.0016). FISH-determined
HER-2/neu
status is not associated with histologic type, tumor size, nodal status, lymph-vascular invasion, or patient age.
...
PMID:Histopathologic characteristics predicting HER-2/neu amplification in breast cancer. 1629 88
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