Abstract

Breast cancer is the most commonly occurring malignancy and the leading cause of cancer-related death in women. Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is the most aggressive subtype and is associated with high recurrence rates, high incidence of distant metastases, and poor overall survival. The aim of this study was to investigate the PI3K/PTEN/Akt/mTOR pathway as one of the most frequently deregulated pathways in cancer. We aimed to explore the impact of PI3K and mTOR oncogenes as well as the PTEN tumor suppressor on TNBC clinical behavior, prognosis, and multidrug resistance (MDR), using immunohistochemistry and copy number analysis by quantitative real-time PCR. Our results revealed that loss of PTEN and high expression of PI3K and mTOR proteins are associated with poor outcome of TNBC patients. PTEN deletions appeared as a major cause of reduced or absent PTEN expression in TNBC. Importantly, homozygous deletions of PTEN (and not hemizygous deletions) are a potential molecular marker of metastasis formation and good predictors of TNBC outcome. In conclusion, we believe that concurrent examination of PTEN/PI3K/mTOR protein expression may be more useful in predicting TNBC clinical course than the analysis of single protein expression. Specifically, our results showed that PTEN-reduced/PI3K-high/mTOR-high expression constitutes a ‘high risk’ profile of TNBC.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer is the most commonly occurring malignancy in women and the leading cause of cancer-related death in women worldwide [1]

  • The level of phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) protein expression was significantly lower in Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) compared to HR+ breast cancer (p = 0.001) (Figure 2)

  • Our study showed that PTEN downregulation was significantly more prevalent in TNBC compared to HR+ disease, which implies that PTEN loss might promote the aggressive behavior of TNBC breast cancer

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Summary

Introduction

Breast cancer is the most commonly occurring malignancy in women and the leading cause of cancer-related death in women worldwide [1]. Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) represents approximately 20% of breast cancer cases and is characterized by the lack of expression of estrogen (ER), progesterone (PR), and HER-2 receptors [2]. TNBC is the most aggressive breast cancer subtype and is associated with high recurrence rates, high incidence of distant metastases, and poor overall survival [3,4]. TNBCs have a very high mitotic activity, which suggests the upregulation of growth factor signaling pathways and downregulation of inhibitors [5]. TNBC does not respond to currently available targeted therapy and often becomes resistant to chemotherapy [6]. Clarifying mechanisms of multidrug resistance (MDR) in TNBC is a priority

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