Abstract

BackgroundBcl-2 is positively regulated by hormonal receptor pathways in breast cancer. A study was conducted to assess the prognostic significances of clinico-pathologic variables and of ER, PR, p53, c-erbB2, bcl-2, or Ki-67 as markers of relapse in breast cancer patients who had received the identical adjuvant therapy at a single institution.MethodsA cohort of 151 curatively resected stage III breast cancer patients (M:F = 3:148, median age 46 years) who had 4 or more positive lymph nodes and received doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide followed by paclitaxel (AC/T) as adjuvant chemotherapy was analyzed for clinico-pathologic characteristics including disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS). Patients with positive ER and/or PR expression received 5 years of tamoxifen following AC/T. The protein expressions of biomarkers were assessed immunohistochemically.ResultsThe median follow-up duration was 36 months, and 37 patients (24.5%) experienced a recurrence. Univariate analyses indicated that the tumor size (P = 0.038) and the number of involved lymph nodes (P < 0.001) significantly affected the recurrences. However, the type of surgery, the histology, histologic grade, the presence of endolymphatic emboli, and a close resection margin did not. Moreover, ER positivity (P = 0.013), bcl-2 positivity (P = 0.002) and low p53 expression (P = 0.032) were found to be significantly associated with a prolonged DFS. Furthermore, multivariate analysis identified 10 or more involved lymph nodes (HR 7.366; P < 0.001), negative bcl-2 expression (HR 2.895; P = 0.030), and c-erbB2 over-expression (HR 3.535; P = 0.001) as independent indicators of poorer DFS. In addition, bcl-2 expression was found to be significantly correlated with the expressions of ER and PR, and inversely correlated with the expressions of p53, c-erbB2 and Ki-67. Patients with bcl-2 expression had a significantly longer DFS than those without, even in the ER (+) subgroup. Moreover, OS was significantly affected by ER, bcl-2 and c-erbB2.ConclusionBcl-2 is an independent prognostic factor of DFS in curatively resected stage III breast cancer patients and appears to be a useful prognostic factor in combination with c-erbB2 and the number of involved lymph nodes.

Highlights

  • Bcl-2 is positively regulated by hormonal receptor pathways in breast cancer

  • Interest has grown for the delineation of prognostic markers identifying subsets of patients more likely to benefit from adjuvant systemic therapies and for the development of predictive markers for response to diverse treatments

  • Adjuvant chemotherapy consisted of 60 mg/m2 doxorubicin and 600 mg/m2 cyclophosphamide every 3 weeks for 4 cycles followed by 175 mg/m2 paclitaxel every 3 weeks for 4 cycles [3]

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Summary

Introduction

Bcl-2 is positively regulated by hormonal receptor pathways in breast cancer. A study was conducted to assess the prognostic significances of clinico-pathologic variables and of ER, PR, p53, c-erbB2, bcl-2, or Ki-67 as markers of relapse in breast cancer patients who had received the identical adjuvant therapy at a single institution. Interest has grown for the delineation of prognostic markers identifying subsets of patients more likely to benefit from adjuvant systemic therapies and for the development of predictive markers for response to diverse treatments. Adjuvant systemic chemotherapy reduces the risk of recurrence and death in breast cancer. Taxane-containing adjuvant regimens have been reported to be more effective than anthracycline-based regimens for curatively resected node-positive breast cancer [1,2]. More accurate and convenient markers are needed to identify patient subgroups requiring individualized adjuvant chemotherapy

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