1. The calpain system is associated with survival of breast cancer patients with large but operable inflammatory and non-inflammatory tumours treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- Author
-
Storr, SJ, Zhang, S, Perren, T, Lansdown, M, Fatayer, H, Sharma, N, Gahlaut, R, Shaaban, A, and Martin, SG
- Subjects
Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Calpain ,Calcium-Binding Proteins ,calpastatin ,Breast Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,survival ,Immunohistochemistry ,Survival Analysis ,Neoadjuvant Therapy ,Young Adult ,breast cancer ,Humans ,Female ,Inflammatory Breast Neoplasms ,Research Paper ,neoadjuvant chemotherapy ,Aged - Abstract
The calpains are a family of intracellular cysteine proteases that function in a variety of important cellular functions, including cell signalling, motility, apoptosis and survival. In early invasive breast cancer expression of calpain-1, calpain-2 and their inhibitor, calpastatin, have been associated with clinical outcome and clinicopathological factors.\ud \ud \ud \ud The expression of calpain-1, calpain-2 and calpastatin was determined using immunohistochemistry on core biopsy samples, in a cohort of large but operable inflammatory and non-inflammatory primary breast cancer patients treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Information on treatment and prognostic variables together with long-term clinical follow-up was available for these patients. Diagnostic pre-chemotherapy core biopsy samples and surgically excised specimens were available for analysis.\ud \ud \ud \ud Expression of calpastatin, calpain-1 or calpain-2 in the core biopsies was not associated with breast cancer specific survival in the total patient cohort; however, in patients with non-inflammatory breast cancer, high calpastatin expression was significantly associated with adverse breast cancer-specific survival (P=0.035), as was low calpain-2 expression (P=0.031). Low calpastatin expression was significantly associated with adverse breast cancer-specific survival of the inflammatory breast cancer patients (P=0.020), as was low calpain-1 expression (P=0.003).\ud \ud \ud \ud In conclusion, high calpain-2 and low calpastatin expression is associated with improved breast cancer-specific survival in non-inflammatory large but operable primary breast cancer treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. In inflammatory cases, high calpain-1 and high calpastatin expression is associated with improved breast cancer-specific survival. Determining the expression of these proteins may be of clinical relevance. Further validation, in multi-centre cohorts of breast cancer patients treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy, is warranted.
- Published
- 2016