Abstract

BackgroundDeletions of chromosome 10q23, including the PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homolog) locus, are known to occur in breast cancer, but systematic analyses of its clinical relevance are lacking.MethodsWe thus analyzed a tissue microarray (TMA) with 2,197 breast cancers by fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH) using a PTEN-specific probe.ResultsPTEN deletions were detected in 19 % of no special type, 9 % of lobular, 4 % of tubular cancers and 46 % in carcinomas with medullary features. 98.7 % of deletions were heterozygous and only 1.3 % were homozygous. PTEN deletion was significantly linked to advanced tumor stage (p = 0.0054), high-grade (p < 0.0001), high tumor cell proliferation (Ki67 Labeling Index; p < 0.0001), and shortened overall survival (p = 0.0090). PTEN deletions were inversely associated with features of luminal type breast cancers (ER/PR positivity; p < 0.0001 each, and CCND1 amplification; p = 0.0020). PTEN deletions were also strongly linked to amplification of genes involved in the PTEN/AKT pathway such as MYC (p = 0.0430) and HER2 (p = 0.0065). Remarkably the combined analysis of MYC, HER2, CCND1 and PTEN aberrations suggested that aberrations of multiple PTEN/AKT pathway genes have a strong additive effect on breast cancer prognosis. While cancers with one of these aberrations behaved only marginally different from cancers with none, disease outcome was markedly worse in cancers with two or more aberrations as compared to those with only one aberration (p = 0.0002). In addition, the particularly poor prognosis of patients with HER2 amplification and PTEN deletions challenges the concept of PTEN deletions interfering with trastuzumab therapy.ConclusionPTEN deletion occurs in a relevant fraction of breast cancers, and is linked to aggressive tumor behavior. Reduced PTEN function cooperates with MYC and HER2 activation in conferring aggressive phenotype to cancer cells.

Highlights

  • Deletions of chromosome 10q23, including the Phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) locus, are known to occur in breast cancer, but systematic analyses of its clinical relevance are lacking

  • PTEN deletion frequency A total of 1,239 (56.4 %) of arrayed cancer samples were analyzable by fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH)

  • Association to breast cancer phenotype PTEN deletions were found in 19 % of No Special Type (NST) cancers, 9 % of lobular (p = 0.0036 vs NST), 35 % of papillary cancers (p = 0.1150 vs NST) and 46 % of cancers with medullary features (p = 0.0002 vs NST)

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Summary

Introduction

Deletions of chromosome 10q23, including the PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homolog) locus, are known to occur in breast cancer, but systematic analyses of its clinical relevance are lacking. Surgical removal of the cancer represents the standard of care followed by radiation and/or adjuvant therapy in patients considered to be at particular risk for persistent local or systemic disease. Histopathological parameters are of particular importance for assessing tumor aggressiveness. This especially applies for pathological stage (pT), histologic grade, and nodal. The PTEN gene at 10q23 encodes a lipid phosphatase that functions as a direct antagonist of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and is involved in the regulation of the AKT pathway. PTEN is one of the most frequently deleted genes in various human cancer types [6], and alterations of

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