Abstract

BackgroundVisfatin has been reported to be associated with breast cancer progression, but the interaction between the visfatin and clinicopathologic factors in breast cancer progression status requires further investigation. To address this problem, it is better to simultaneously consider multiple factors in sensitivity and specificity assays.MethodsIn this study, a dataset for 105 breast cancer patients (84 disease-free and 21 progressing) were chosen. Individual and cumulative receiver operating characteristics (ROC) were used to analyze the impact of each factor along with interaction effects.ResultsIn individual ROC analysis, only 3 of 13 factors showed better performance for area under curve (AUC), i.e., AUC > 7 for hormone therapy (HT), tissue visfatin, and lymph node (LN) metastasis. Under our proposed scoring system, the cumulative ROC analysis provides higher AUC performance (0.746–0.886) than individual ROC analysis in predicting breast cancer progression. Considering the interaction between these factors, a minimum of six factors, including HT, tissue visfatin, LN metastasis, tumor stage, age, and tumor size, were identified as being highly interactive and associated with breast cancer progression, providing potential and optimal discriminators for predicting breast cancer progression.ConclusionTaken together, the cumulative ROC analysis provides better prediction for breast cancer progression than individual ROC analysis.

Highlights

  • Visfatin has been reported to be associated with breast cancer progression, but the interaction between the visfatin and clinicopathologic factors in breast cancer progression status requires further investigation

  • Clinicopathologic characteristics and progression of breast cancer Disease progression developed in 21 (20.0%) of the 105 breast cancer patients tracked within 5-year follow-up

  • We previously reported that the correlation between tissue visfatin and several individual clinicopathologic factors [21], but the specificity and sensitivity, along with mutual interactions, were not investigated for breast cancer progression

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Summary

Introduction

Visfatin has been reported to be associated with breast cancer progression, but the interaction between the visfatin and clinicopathologic factors in breast cancer progression status requires further investigation. To address this problem, it is better to simultaneously consider multiple factors in sensitivity and specificity assays. Moi et al Cancer Cell Int (2018) 18:19 These factors are generally taken individually without considering possible mutual interactions. The correlation between visfatin and several clinicopathologic factors were analyzed individually [21], but possible interaction between visfatin and breast cancer progression-associated clinicopathologic factors has not been investigated. The specificity and sensitivity of visfatin as an independent prognosis predictor for breast cancer has not been addressed

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