Abstract
Aims and background
Breast carcinoma is a heterogeneous disease, the prognosis of which correlates with various prognostic factors. The aim of this study was to assess the prognostic significance of c-erbB-2 overexpression in breast carcinoma patients in association with other known prognostic factors.
Methods & study design
The relationship between immunohistochemical expression of the c-erbB-2 oncoprotein and various established prognostic factors such as tumor size, axillary node status, estrogen and progesterone receptor status, DNA ploidy, proliferation index, cathepsin D expression and histological grade in invasive ductal breast carcinoma is presented in this study.
Results
Of the 93 ductal invasive carcinomas 22 (23.7%) were grade I, 51 (54.8%) grade II, and 20 (21.5%) grade III, and the majority (78: 83.9%) were 2-5 cm in diameter. Tumor metastases were identified in one or more lymph nodes in 55 (59.1%) patients, the remaining 38 (40.9%) patients being lymph node negative. According to the DNA histograms 40 (43.0%) tumors were aneuploid and 53 (57.0%) were diploid, and the majority of tumors had more than 4% of cells in the S phase of the cell cycle (83.9%). Expression of c-erbB-2 as shown by immunohistochemical intense membrane staining was present in 49 (52.7%) tumors. Cathepsin D-positive cytoplasmic granular staining and cathepsin D-positive stromal macrophages were found in 60 (64.5%) and 72 (77.4%) tumors, respectively. Univariate analysis showed that overall survival correlated significantly with axillary lymph node involvement and with estrogen and progesterone receptor status for each of the receptors separately and for their coexpression, and only marginally with c-erbB-2 overexpression. In mulitivariate analysis only axillary lymph node metastases and coexpression of estrogen and progesterone receptors were found to be independent and significant prognostic factors.
Conclusions
When patients were stratified according, to c-erbB-2 expression it was shown that those with c-erbB-2 overexpression and grade II tumors, tumor size greater than 2 cm, high content of aneuploid cells and cathepsin D-positive stromal macrophages had a shorter long-term survival than c-erbB-2 negative patients.
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