Abstract

BackgroundThe clinical significance of progesterone receptor (PgR) expression in estrogen receptor-negative (ER–) breast cancer is controversial. Herein, we systemically investigate the clinicopathologic features, molecular essence, and endocrine responsiveness of ER−/PgR+/HER2− phenotype.MethodsFour study cohorts were included. The first and second cohorts were from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results database (n = 67,932) and Fudan University Shanghai Cancer Center (n = 2,338), respectively, for clinicopathologic and survival analysis. The third and fourth cohorts were from two independent publicly available microarray datasets including 837 operable cases and 483 cases undergoing neoadjuvant chemotherapy, respectively, for clinicopathologic and gene-expression analysis. Characterized genes defining subgroups within the ER–/PgR+/HER2– phenotype were determined and further validated.ResultsClinicopathologic features and survival outcomes of the ER–/PgR+ phenotype fell in between the ER+/PgR+ and ER−/PgR− phenotypes, but were more similar to ER−/PgR−. Among the ER−/PgR+ phenotype, 30 % (95 % confidence interval [CI] 17–42 %, pooled by a fixed-effects method) were luminal-like and 59 % (95 % CI 45–72 %, pooled by a fixed-effects method) were basal-like. We further refined the characterized genes for subtypes within the ER−/PgR+ phenotype and developed an immunohistochemistry-based method that could determine the molecular essence of ER−/PgR+ using three markers, TFF1, CK5, and EGFR. Either PAM50-defined or immunohistochemistry-defined basal-like ER−/PgR+ cases have a lower endocrine therapy sensitivity score compared with luminal-like ER−/PgR+ cases (P <0.0001 by Mann-Whitney test for each study set and P <0.0001 for pooled standardized mean difference in meta-analysis). Immunohistochemistry-defined basal-like ER−/PgR+ cases might not benefit from adjuvant endocrine therapy (log-rank P = 0.61 for sufficient versus insufficient endocrine therapy).ConclusionsThe majority of ER−/PgR+/HER2– phenotype breast cancers are basal-like and associated with a lower endocrine therapy sensitivity score. Additional studies are needed to validate these findings.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12916-015-0496-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The clinical significance of progesterone receptor (PgR) expression in estrogen receptor-negative (ER–) breast cancer is controversial

  • We identified 67,932 HER2negative patients according to the following criteria: female, surgical treatment, AJCC stages I–III, pathologically confirmed invasive ductal carcinoma, unilateral, known ER/PgR/ HER2 status, known time of diagnosis, and breast cancer as the first cancer at diagnosis

  • Clinicopathologic features and survival outcomes of breast cancer with ER–/PgR+/HER2− phenotype In HER2– cases, the ER−/PgR+ phenotype accounted for 0.8–4.3 % among the four cohorts, with the pooled overall proportion of 2.5 %, which is consistent with previous reports [2, 8, 9, 39]

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Summary

Introduction

The clinical significance of progesterone receptor (PgR) expression in estrogen receptor-negative (ER–) breast cancer is controversial. We systemically investigate the clinicopathologic features, molecular essence, and endocrine responsiveness of ER−/PgR+/HER2− phenotype. The progesterone receptor (PgR) is a downstream relative of the estrogen receptor (ER), which activates the expression of PgR via the estrogen-responsive element located in the promoter region of the PgR gene. Adequate expression of PgR indicates a functional ER-α and ER-α pathway [1]. Loss of PgR expression in ER-positive (ER+) breast cancer potentially defines a subgroup with impaired function in the ER pathway, which probably gains limited benefit from endocrine therapy [2,3,4]. An ER−/PgR+ breast cancer cell line had been described earlier [10], indicating a mechanism of PgR expression regulation independent from ER-α

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