Abstract

BackgroundInvasive mammary carcinomas that spontaneously develop in female cats are associated with high mortality, and resemble the most aggressive human breast cancers, especially triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). Transcriptome studies showed that TNBCs are a heterogeneous group that includes a potentially hormone-dependent subtype named luminal-AR. Some authors proposed an immunohistochemical definition of the luminal-AR subtype, which is not only positive for Androgen Receptor (AR), but also either positive for the transcription factor Forkhead box A1 (FOXA1), or negative for basal markers. The objectives of this study were to describe AR and FOXA1 expressions in feline mammary carcinomas (FMCs), their prognostic value, and if their coexpression could define a “luminal-AR” subtype of triple-negative mammary carcinomas in cats.MethodsIn a previously described retrospective cohort of 180 female cats with FMCs, with a 2-year follow-up post-mastectomy, we assessed AR, FOXA1, ER, PR, Ki-67, HER2, and CK14 expressions by automated immunohistochemistry.ResultsOf the 180 FMCs, 57 (32%) were luminal; i.e., ER and/or PR positive, and 123 (68%) were triple-negative (ER–, PR– and HER2–) FMCs. AR overexpression (found in 33 cases/180, 18%) and FOXA1 index ≥1% (64/180, 36%) were associated with a longer disease-free interval, overall survival, and cancer-specific survival in cats with FMC. Analysis of AR, FOXA1 and CK14 coexpression in triple-negative FMCs showed that AR+ triple-negative FMCs were heterogeneous: there existed an AR+ FOXA1+ CK14– subgroup (n = 7) associated with a better cancer-specific survival by multivariate survival analysis (HR = 0.26, 95% CI: 0.07–0.89, p = 0.03) compared to AR+ FOXA1–CK14+ triple-negative FMCs (n = 46) (HR = 1.00), independently of the pathologic tumor size and pathologic nodal stage. The non-basal-like subtype of triple-negative FMCs that coexpresses AR and FOXA1 (the AR+ FOXA1+ CK14– subgroup) could represent the equivalent of the luminal-AR subgroup of human triple-negative breast cancer.ConclusionsWe identified an AR+ FOXA1+ CK14– subgroup of triple-negative FMCs that might correspond to the luminal-AR subgroup of human triple-negative breast cancers. Cats with FMC may be interesting spontaneous animal models to investigate new strategies targeting the androgen receptor, especially in the aggressive subtype of AR+ basal-like triple-negative mammary carcinomas with loss of FOXA1 expression (the AR+ FOXA1–CK14+ subgroup).

Highlights

  • Invasive mammary carcinomas that spontaneously develop in female cats are associated with high mortality, and resemble the most aggressive human breast cancers, especially triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC)

  • These results suggest that loss of Forkhead box A1 (FOXA1) expression and basal marker Cytokeratin 14 (CK14) expression in triple-negative Feline invasive mammary carcinoma (FMC) split the Androgen Receptor (AR)+ phenotype into two subgroups of different aggressiveness, a good-prognosis non basal-like AR+ FOXA1+ CK14– subgroup, and a poor-prognosis basal-like AR+ FOXA1–CK14+ subgroup

  • The first objective was to determine if AR and FOXA1 expressions are common in FMCs

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Summary

Introduction

Invasive mammary carcinomas that spontaneously develop in female cats are associated with high mortality, and resemble the most aggressive human breast cancers, especially triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). The second is their aggressive biological behavior: the median overall survival time of cats with invasive mammary carcinomas is 8–12 months post-diagnosis in most studies with follow-up [4,5,6,7,8,9] The third is their resemblance with the most aggressive subtypes of breast cancer, for which targeted therapies are still needed: feline mammary carcinomas (FMCs) often lack significant levels of Estrogen Receptor (ER) and Progesterone Receptor (PR) expression, are rarely positive to HER2 (Human Epidermal growth factor Receptor 2), and most of them are considered to be triple-negative mammary carcinomas [10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19]. Preclinical studies suggest that FOXA1 allows AR to bind to DNA and thereby induce transcription of AR target genes and stimulate tumor proliferation [27]

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