Abstract

Breast cancer is the most prevalent cancer in women. Early detection of this disease improves survival and therefore population screenings, based on mammography, are performed. However, the sensitivity of this screening modality is not optimal and new screening methods, such as blood tests, are being explored. Most of the analyses that aim for early detection focus on proteins in the bloodstream. In this study, the biomarker potential of total serum N-glycosylation analysis was explored with regard to detection of breast cancer. In an age-matched case-control setup serum protein N-glycan profiles from 145 breast cancer patients were compared to those from 171 healthy individuals. N-glycans were enzymatically released, chemically derivatized to preserve linkage-specificity of sialic acids and characterized by high resolution mass spectrometry. Logistic regression analysis was used to evaluate associations of specific N-glycan structures as well as N-glycosylation traits with breast cancer. In a case-control comparison three associations were found, namely a lower level of a two triantennary glycans and a higher level of one tetraantennary glycan in cancer patients. Of note, various other N-glycomic signatures that had previously been reported were not replicated in the current cohort. It was further evaluated whether the lack of replication of breast cancer N-glycomic signatures could be partly explained by the heterogenous character of the disease since the studies performed so far were based on cohorts that included diverging subtypes in different numbers. It was found that serum N-glycan profiles differed for the various cancer subtypes that were analyzed in this study.

Highlights

  • Worldwide 2,089,000 women were diagnosed with breast cancer with an estimated related death of 626,000 in 2018 [1]

  • A large number of mass spectrometry (MS)-based exploratory studies has resulted in breast cancer protein signatures, none of these findings has been translated into a laboratory test [8]

  • In this study we report total serum Nglycome (TSNG) profiles from an in-house collected breast cancer cohort and compare our results with the aforementioned reports

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Summary

Introduction

Worldwide 2,089,000 women were diagnosed with breast cancer with an estimated related death of 626,000 in 2018 [1]. Our sample cohort consists of 145 breast cancer patients that are age-matched with 171 healthy control individuals. Serum samples of 159 female patients with breast cancer and 173 female healthy volunteers were collected at the outpatients clinic at Leiden University Medical Center prior to any treatment between 2002 and 2013.

Results
Conclusion
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