Abstract

Lysosome-associated protein transmembrane-4 beta (LAPTM4B) is an integral membrane protein overexpressed in various cancers and may function as a prognostic tumor marker. The present study is aimed at understanding the clinical significance of serum LAPTM4B in breast cancer (BC). Serum LAPTM4B level was evaluated in 426 BC patients, 40 benign breast disease, and 80 healthy controls by ELISA. We used the receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curve to assess the diagnostic significance. 46 BC patients were recruited to monitor the dynamic change of serum LAPTM4B during adjuvant therapy (AT). In addition, sera from a subset of 330 patients undergoing AT, including anti-HER2 treatment, were collected to evaluate the association between LAPTM4B levels and AT efficacy. Descriptive and explorative statistical analyses were used to assess LAPTM4 B's potential as a diagnostic and prognostic marker in BC. Serum LAPTM4B level was significantly increased in BC patients than benign group and controls. It could well discriminate BC from healthy controls with diagnostic accuracy with an AUC of 0.912, a sensitivity of 85.9%, and a specificity of 83.8%. Compared with pre-AT, serum LAPTM4B concentration remarkably decreased after AT. In addition, patients in the invalid response group (PD + SD) showed higher LAPTM4B levels than the valid response group (PR + CR). Our results proposed that serum LAPTM4B had a high diagnostic and prognostic impact as a circulating biomarker in BC.

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