Abstract

IntroductionNeoadjuvant treatments for primary breast cancer are becoming more common; however, little is known about how these impact on response to subsequent adjuvant therapies. Conveniently, neoadjuvant therapy provides opportunities to consider this question, by studying therapy-induced expression changes using comparisons between pre- and posttreatment samples. These data are relatively lacking in the context of neoadjuvant endocrine therapy, as opposed to the more common neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Here, we investigate the relevance of expression of the xenobiotic transporter ABCG2/BCRP, a gene/protein associated with chemoresistance, in the context of neoadjuvant endocrine therapy and particularly with reference to subsequent chemotherapy treatment. Materials and MethodsABCG2/BCRP expression was assessed by immunohistochemistry or by expression arrays in matched patient samples pre- and post-neoadjuvant endocrine therapy. Cell culture was used to model the impact of endocrine therapy-induced changes in ABCG2/BCRP on subsequent chemotherapy response, using Western blots, quantitative polymerase chain reaction, survival assays, and cell cycle analyses. ResultsABCG2/BCRP was commonly and significantly upregulated in breast cancers after treatment with neoadjuvant endocrine therapy in 3 separate cohorts encompassing a total of 200 patients. Treatment with the endocrine therapeutic tamoxifen similarly induced ABCG2/BCRP upregulation in a relevant model cell line, the estrogen receptor-positive line T47D. Critically, this upregulation was associated with significantly increased chemoresistance to subsequent treatment with epirubicin, an anthracycline commonly used in breast cancer adjuvant chemotherapy. ConclusionOur data suggest that neoadjuvant endocrine therapy may induce poor responses to adjuvant chemotherapy, and therefore, that clinical outcomes following this treatment sequence warrant further study.

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