ObjectiveTo investigate the relationship between the expression of androgen receptor (AR) and clinical characteristics in breast cancer.Patients and methodsThe clinical records of all 432 patients tested for AR in our institution between January 2020 and May 2023 were reviewed. Clinical characteristics, age, menopausal status, tumor node metastasis (TNM) stage, distant metastasis, pathological complete response (pCR), histopathological features histological grade, estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor, Her-2, Ki-67, and molecular subtype were registered for all patients.ResultsAbout 377 (87.27%) of the 432 patients had AR expression.No significant difference in AR expression was found with age, menopausal status, TNM stage of primary tumor, or pCR. AR was positively and significantly associated with the histological grade, and recurrence. The AR expression was significantly related with molecular subtypes, including ER, PR Her-2, Ki67 and molecular subtype. ER (OR = 10.489, 95%CI: 5.470–21.569), PR (OR = 7.690, 95%CI: 3.974–16.129, Her-2 (OR = 10.489, 95%CI: 2.779–23.490 and tumor recurrence (OR = 0.110, 95%CI: 0.031–0.377 were significant independent risk factors affecting AR expression.ConclusionsAR expression can serve as a reliable basis for judging the clinical molecular types and poor prognosis for breast cancer. AR may be a novel biomarker and target in AR-positive breast cancer depending on significant difference in AR expression among different molecular types of breast cancer.
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