531 results on '"van't Veer, P."'
Search Results
2. The role of ultra-processed foods in plant-based diets: associations with human health and environmental sustainability
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Daas, Merel C., Vellinga, Reina E., Pinho, Maria Gabriela M., Boer, Jolanda M. A., Verschuren, W. M. Monique, van der Schouw, Yvonne T., van’t Veer, Pieter, and Biesbroek, Sander
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- 2024
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3. Experimental analyses of temperature and pressure oscillation frequencies of a flat plate pulsating heat pipe tested under various edge orientation angles and heat loads
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Ayel, Vincent, Pagliarini, Luca, Van’t Veer, Thibault, Slobodeniuk, Maksym, Bozzoli, Fabio, Romestant, Cyril, and Bertin, Yves
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- 2024
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4. Radiomic tumor phenotypes augment molecular profiling in predicting recurrence free survival after breast neoadjuvant chemotherapy.
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Chitalia, Rhea, Miliotis, Marios, Jahani, Nariman, Tastsoglou, Spyros, McDonald, Elizabeth S, Belenky, Vivian, Cohen, Eric A, Newitt, David, Van't Veer, Laura J, Esserman, Laura, Hylton, Nola, DeMichele, Angela, Hatzigeorgiou, Artemis, and Kontos, Despina
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Breast Cancer ,Cancer ,Biomedical Imaging ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Good Health and Well Being - Abstract
BackgroundEarly changes in breast intratumor heterogeneity during neoadjuvant chemotherapy may reflect the tumor's ability to adapt and evade treatment. We investigated the combination of precision medicine predictors of genomic and MRI data towards improved prediction of recurrence free survival (RFS).MethodsA total of 100 women from the ACRIN 6657/I-SPY 1 trial were retrospectively analyzed. We estimated MammaPrint, PAM50 ROR-S, and p53 mutation scores from publicly available gene expression data and generated four, voxel-wise 3-D radiomic kinetic maps from DCE-MR images at both pre- and early-treatment time points. Within the primary lesion from each kinetic map, features of change in radiomic heterogeneity were summarized into 6 principal components.ResultsWe identify two imaging phenotypes of change in intratumor heterogeneity (p
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- 2023
5. Obesity-associated changes in molecular biology of primary breast cancer
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Nguyen, Ha-Linh, Geukens, Tatjana, Maetens, Marion, Aparicio, Samuel, Bassez, Ayse, Borg, Ake, Brock, Jane, Broeks, Annegien, Caldas, Carlos, Cardoso, Fatima, De Schepper, Maxim, Delorenzi, Mauro, Drukker, Caroline A., Glas, Annuska M., Green, Andrew R., Isnaldi, Edoardo, Eyfjörð, Jórunn, Khout, Hazem, Knappskog, Stian, Krishnamurthy, Savitri, Lakhani, Sunil R., Langerod, Anita, Martens, John W. M., McCart Reed, Amy E., Murphy, Leigh, Naulaerts, Stefan, Nik-Zainal, Serena, Nevelsteen, Ines, Neven, Patrick, Piccart, Martine, Poncet, Coralie, Punie, Kevin, Purdie, Colin, Rakha, Emad A., Richardson, Andrea, Rutgers, Emiel, Vincent-Salomon, Anne, Simpson, Peter T., Schmidt, Marjanka K., Sotiriou, Christos, Span, Paul N., Tan, Kiat Tee Benita, Thompson, Alastair, Tommasi, Stefania, Van Baelen, Karen, Van de Vijver, Marc, Van Laere, Steven, van’t Veer, Laura, Viale, Giuseppe, Viari, Alain, Vos, Hanne, Witteveen, Anke T., Wildiers, Hans, Floris, Giuseppe, Garg, Abhishek D., Smeets, Ann, Lambrechts, Diether, Biganzoli, Elia, Richard, François, and Desmedt, Christine
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- 2023
- Full Text
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6. Ganitumab and metformin plus standard neoadjuvant therapy in stage 2/3 breast cancer.
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Yee, Douglas, Isaacs, Claudine, Wolf, Denise M, Yau, Christina, Haluska, Paul, Giridhar, Karthik V, Forero-Torres, Andres, Jo Chien, A, Wallace, Anne M, Pusztai, Lajos, Albain, Kathy S, Ellis, Erin D, Beckwith, Heather, Haley, Barbara B, Elias, Anthony D, Boughey, Judy C, Kemmer, Kathleen, Yung, Rachel L, Pohlmann, Paula R, Tripathy, Debu, Clark, Amy S, Han, Hyo S, Nanda, Rita, Khan, Qamar J, Edmiston, Kristen K, Petricoin, Emanuel F, Stringer-Reasor, Erica, Falkson, Carla I, Majure, Melanie, Mukhtar, Rita A, Helsten, Teresa L, Moulder, Stacy L, Robinson, Patricia A, Wulfkuhle, Julia D, Brown-Swigart, Lamorna, Buxton, Meredith, Clennell, Julia L, Paoloni, Melissa, Sanil, Ashish, Berry, Scott, Asare, Smita M, Wilson, Amy, Hirst, Gillian L, Singhrao, Ruby, Asare, Adam L, Matthews, Jeffrey B, Hylton, Nola M, DeMichele, Angela, Melisko, Michelle, Perlmutter, Jane, Rugo, Hope S, Fraser Symmans, W, Van't Veer, Laura J, Berry, Donald A, and Esserman, Laura J
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Diabetes ,Cancer ,Breast Cancer ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals - Abstract
I-SPY2 is an adaptively randomized phase 2 clinical trial evaluating novel agents in combination with standard-of-care paclitaxel followed by doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide in the neoadjuvant treatment of breast cancer. Ganitumab is a monoclonal antibody designed to bind and inhibit function of the type I insulin-like growth factor receptor (IGF-1R). Ganitumab was tested in combination with metformin and paclitaxel (PGM) followed by AC compared to standard-of-care alone. While pathologic complete response (pCR) rates were numerically higher in the PGM treatment arm for hormone receptor-negative, HER2-negative breast cancer (32% versus 21%), this small increase did not meet I-SPY's prespecified threshold for graduation. PGM was associated with increased hyperglycemia and elevated hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), despite the use of metformin in combination with ganitumab. We evaluated several putative predictive biomarkers of ganitumab response (e.g., IGF-1 ligand score, IGF-1R signature, IGFBP5 expression, baseline HbA1c). None were specific predictors of response to PGM, although several signatures were associated with pCR in both arms. Any further development of anti-IGF-1R therapy will require better control of anti-IGF-1R drug-induced hyperglycemia and the development of more predictive biomarkers.
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- 2021
7. Circadian PERformance in breast cancer: a germline and somatic genetic study of PER3VNTR polymorphisms and gene co-expression.
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Fores-Martos, Jaume, Cervera-Vidal, Raimundo, Sierra-Roca, Julia, Lozano-Asencio, Carlos, Fedele, Vita, Cornelissen, Sten, Edvarsen, Hege, Tadeo-Cervera, Irene, Eroles, Pilar, Lluch, Ana, Tabares-Seisdedos, Rafa, Falcó, Antonio, Van't Veer, Laura J, Schmidt, Marjanka, Quigley, David A, Børresen-Dale, Anne-Lise, Kristensen, Vessela N, Balmain, Allan, and Climent, Joan
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Polymorphisms in the PER3 gene have been associated with several human disease phenotypes, including sleep disorders and cancer. In particular, the long allele of a variable number of tandem repeat (VNTR) polymorphism has been previously linked to an increased risk of breast cancer. Here we carried out a combined germline and somatic genetic analysis of the role of the PER3VNRT polymorphism in breast cancer. The combined data from 8284 individuals showed a non-significant trend towards increased breast cancer risk in the 5-repeat allele homozygous carriers (OR = 1.17, 95% CI: 0.97-1.42). We observed allelic imbalance at the PER3 locus in matched blood and tumor DNA samples, showing a significant retention of the long variant (risk) allele in tumor samples, and a preferential loss of the short repetition allele (p = 0.0005). Gene co-expression analysis in healthy and tumoral breast tissue samples uncovered significant associations between PER3 expression levels with those from genes which belong to several cancer-associated pathways. Finally, relapse-free survival (RFS) analysis showed that low expression levels of PER3 were linked to a significant lower RSF in luminal A (p = 3 × 10-12) but not in the rest of breast cancer subtypes.
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- 2021
8. Current Landscape of Breast Cancer Imaging and Potential Quantitative Imaging Markers of Response in ER-Positive Breast Cancers Treated with Neoadjuvant Therapy.
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Jones, Ella F, Hathi, Deep K, Freimanis, Rita, Mukhtar, Rita A, Chien, A Jo, Esserman, Laura J, Van't Veer, Laura J, Joe, Bonnie N, and Hylton, Nola M
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MRI ,PET ,X-ray ,breast cancer ,estrogen receptor ,mammography ,neoadjuvant therapy ,quantitative imaging ,ultrasound ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis - Abstract
In recent years, neoadjuvant treatment trials have shown that breast cancer subtypes identified on the basis of genomic and/or molecular signatures exhibit different response rates and recurrence outcomes, with the implication that subtype-specific treatment approaches are needed. Estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancers present a unique set of challenges for determining optimal neoadjuvant treatment approaches. There is increased recognition that not all ER+ breast cancers benefit from chemotherapy, and that there may be a subset of ER+ breast cancers that can be treated effectively using endocrine therapies alone. With this uncertainty, there is a need to improve the assessment and to optimize the treatment of ER+ breast cancers. While pathology-based markers offer a snapshot of tumor response to neoadjuvant therapy, non-invasive imaging of the ER disease in response to treatment would provide broader insights into tumor heterogeneity, ER biology, and the timing of surrogate endpoint measurements. In this review, we provide an overview of the current landscape of breast imaging in neoadjuvant studies and highlight the technological advances in each imaging modality. We then further examine some potential imaging markers for neoadjuvant treatment response in ER+ breast cancers.
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- 2020
9. MK-2206 and Standard Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy Improves Response in Patients With Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2-Positive and/or Hormone Receptor-Negative Breast Cancers in the I-SPY 2 Trial.
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Chien, A Jo, Tripathy, Debasish, Albain, Kathy S, Symmans, W Fraser, Rugo, Hope S, Melisko, Michelle E, Wallace, Anne M, Schwab, Richard, Helsten, Teresa, Forero-Torres, Andres, Stringer-Reasor, Erica, Ellis, Erin D, Kaplan, Henry G, Nanda, Rita, Jaskowiak, Nora, Murthy, Rashmi, Godellas, Constantine, Boughey, Judy C, Elias, Anthony D, Haley, Barbara B, Kemmer, Kathleen, Isaacs, Claudine, Clark, Amy S, Lang, Julie E, Lu, Janice, Korde, Larissa, Edmiston, Kirsten K, Northfelt, Donald W, Viscusi, Rebecca K, Yee, Douglas, Perlmutter, Jane, Hylton, Nola M, Van't Veer, Laura J, DeMichele, Angela, Wilson, Amy, Peterson, Garry, Buxton, Meredith B, Paoloni, Melissa, Clennell, Julia, Berry, Scott, Matthews, Jeffrey B, Steeg, Katherine, Singhrao, Ruby, Hirst, Gillian L, Sanil, Ashish, Yau, Christina, Asare, Smita M, Berry, Donald A, and Esserman, Laura J
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Cancer ,Women's Health ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Breast Cancer ,Precision Medicine ,Clinical Research ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Adult ,Aged ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Breast Neoplasms ,Doxorubicin ,Female ,Heterocyclic Compounds ,3-Ring ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Neoadjuvant Therapy ,Paclitaxel ,Protein Kinase Inhibitors ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt ,Receptor ,ErbB-2 ,Receptors ,Steroid ,Trastuzumab ,I-SPY 2 Consortium ,Receptor ,erbB-2 ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
PurposeThe phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt/mammalian target of rapamycin is a key pathway of survival and therapeutic resistance in breast cancer. We evaluated the pan-Akt inhibitor MK-2206 in combination with standard therapy in patients with high-risk early-stage breast cancer.Patients and methodsI-SPY 2 is a multicenter, phase II, open-label, adaptively randomized neoadjuvant platform trial that screens experimental therapies and efficiently identifies potential predictive biomarker signatures. Patients are categorized by human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2), hormone receptor (HR), and MammaPrint statuses in a 2 × 2 × 2 layout. Patients within each of these 8 biomarker subtypes are adaptively randomly assigned to one of several experimental therapies, including MK-2206, or control. Therapies are evaluated for 10 biomarker signatures, each of which is a combination of these subtypes. The primary end point is pathologic complete response (pCR). A therapy graduates with one or more of these signatures if and when it has an 85% Bayesian predictive probability of success in a hypothetical phase III trial, adjusting for biomarker covariates. Patients in the current report received standard taxane- and anthracycline-based neoadjuvant therapy without (control) or with oral MK-2206 135 mg/week.ResultsMK-2206 graduated with 94 patients and 57 concurrently randomly assigned controls in 3 graduation signatures: HR-negative/HER2-positive, HR-negative, and HER2-positive. Respective Bayesian mean covariate-adjusted pCR rates and percentage probability that MK-2206 is superior to control were 0.48:0.29 (97%), 0.62:0.36 (99%), and 0.46:0.26 (94%). In exploratory analyses, MK-2206 evinced a numerical improvement in event-free survival in its graduating signatures. The most significant grade 3-4 toxicity was rash (14% maculopapular, 8.6% acneiform).ConclusionThe Akt inhibitor MK-2206 combined with standard neoadjuvant therapy resulted in higher estimated pCR rates in HR-negative and HER2-positive breast cancer. Although MK-2206 is not being further developed at this time, this class of agents remains of clinical interest.
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- 2020
10. Abstract OT3-03-02: Personalized breast cancer screening in a population-based study: Women informed to screen depending on measures of risk (WISDOM)
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Che, Mandy, Fiscallini, Allison Stover, Acerbi, Irene, Shieh, Yiweh, Madlensky, Lisa, Tice, Jeffrey, Ziv, Elad, Eklund, Martin, Blanco, Amie, Tong, Barry, Goodman, Deborah, Nassereddine, Lamees, Anderson, Nancy, Harvey, Heather, Fors, Steele, Park, Hannah L, Petruse, Antonia, Stewart, Skye, Wernisch, Janet, Risty, Larissa, Hurley, Ian, Koenig, Barbara, Kaplan, Celia, Hiatt, Robert, Wenger, Neil, Lee, Vivian, Heditsian, Diane, Brain, Susie, Sabacan, Leah, Parker, Barbara, Borowsky, Alexander, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Naeim, Arash, Kaster, Andrea, Talley, Melinda, van't Veer, Laura, LaCroix, Andrea, Olopade, Olufunmilayo I, and Sheth, Deepa
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Health Services ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Breast Cancer ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Genetics ,Cancer ,Good Health and Well Being ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis - Abstract
Abstract: Background: WISDOM is a 100,000 healthy women preference-tolerant, pragmatic study comparing traditional annual screening to personalized risk-based breast screening. The novelty of WISDOM personalized screening is the integration of previously validated genetic and clinical risk factors (age, family history, breast biopsy results, ethnicity, mammographic density) into a single risk assessment model that directs the starting age, timing, and frequency of screening. The goal of WISDOM is to determine if personalized screening, compared to annual screening, is as safe, less morbid, enables prevention, and is more accepted by women. The study is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02620852. Methods: Women aged 40-74 years with no history of breast cancer or DCIS, and no previous double mastectomy can join the study online at wisdomstudy.org. Participants can either elect randomization or self-select a study arm. Then, they can provide electronic consent and sign the Release for Medical Information via DocuSign. For all participants, 5-year risk of developing breast cancer is calculated according to the Breast Cancer Screening Consortium (BCSC) model. Participants in the personalized arm undergo panel-based mutation testing (BRCA1, BRCA2, TP53, PTEN, STK11, CDH1, ATM, PALB2, and CHEK2), and their 5-year risk is calculated using the BCSC score combined with a Polygenic Risk Score (BCSC-PRS) that includes 75 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) known to increase breast cancer risk (will increase to 229). The SNPs and mutations are assessed by saliva-based testing through Color Genomics. 5-year risk level thresholds are used to stratify for low-, moderate- and high risk. Risk stratification determines age to start, stop, and frequency of screening. Accrual: As of July 2019, the WISDOM study is open to all eligible women in California, North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, Iowa, Illinois, and New Jersey. To date, 30,392 eligible women have registered, and 21,392 women have consented to participate in the trial. The median age was 56 years. 85% of participants were Caucasian, 2% African-American, and 5% Asian. 6% self-reported Hispanic ethnicity. WISDOM is actively partnering with Blue Cross Blue Shield Association for national coverage, self-insured companies (Salesforce, Genentech, Qualcomm, CalPERS) and Medi-Cal (Inland Empire Health Plan) using a coverage with evidence progression approach. Accrual expansion and diversity: To strengthen generalizability, the WISDOM Study is enhancing the diversity of our potential participant population by expanding to other states (Alabama, Louisiana), and partnering with other health insurers and self-insured companies. Future expansion regions include Texas, Florida, South Carolina, Oklahoma, Montana, and New Mexico. Additionally, we have translated the whole study experience to Spanish to further reach Spanish-speaking communities. With the engagement of patient advocates and community partnerships, expanding diversity recruitment will strengthen our scientific knowledge of breast cancer risk and increase access to personalized breast cancer screening recommendations for all women. WISDOM enrollment will continue through 2020. Conclusions: Results at 5 years will enable us to demonstrate that personalized screening improves healthcare value by reducing screen volumes and costs without jeopardizing outcomes. Citation Format: Mandy Che, Allison Stover Fiscallini, Irene Acerbi, Yiweh Shieh, Lisa Madlensky, Jeffrey Tice, Elad Ziv, Martin Eklund, Amie Blanco, Barry Tong, Deborah Goodman, Lamees Nassereddine, Nancy Anderson, Heather Harvey, Steele Fors, Hannah L Park, Antonia Petruse, Skye Stewart, Janet Wernisch, Larissa Risty, Ian Hurley, Barbara Koenig, Celia Kaplan, Robert Hiatt, Neil Wenger, Vivian Lee, Diane Heditsian, Susie Brain, Leah Sabacan, Barbara Parker, Alexander Borowsky, Hoda Anton-Culver, Hoda Anton-Culver, Arash Naeim, Andrea Kaster, Melinda Talley, Laura van't Veer, Andrea LaCroix, Olufunmilayo I Olopade, Deepa Sheth, WISDOM Study and Athena Breast Health Network Investigators and Advocate Partners and Laura Esserman. Personalized breast cancer screening in a population-based study: Women informed to screen depending on measures of risk (WISDOM) [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 2019 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium; 2019 Dec 10-14; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2020;80(4 Suppl):Abstract nr OT3-03-02.
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- 2020
11. Antibody-Drug Conjugates Targeting the Urokinase Receptor (uPAR) as a Possible Treatment of Aggressive Breast Cancer.
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Harel, Efrat T, Drake, Penelope M, Barfield, Robyn M, Lui, Irene, Farr-Jones, Shauna, Van't Veer, Laura, Gartner, Zev J, Green, Evan M, Lourenço, André Luiz, Cheng, Yifan, Hann, Byron C, Rabuka, David, and Craik, Charles S
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antibody-drug conjugate ,cleavable linker ,maytansinoid ,monomethyl auristatin E ,non-cleavable linker ,site-specific conjugations ,targeted therapy ,triple-negative breast cancer ,urokinase receptor - Abstract
A promising molecular target for aggressive cancers is the urokinase receptor (uPAR). A fully human, recombinant antibody that binds uPAR to form a stable complex that blocks uPA-uPAR interactions (2G10) and is internalized primarily through endocytosis showed efficacy in a mouse xenograft model of highly aggressive, triple negative breast cancer (TNBC). Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) of 2G10 were designed and produced bearing tubulin inhibitor payloads ligated through seven different linkers. Aldehyde tag technology was employed for linking, and either one or two tags were inserted into the antibody heavy chain, to produce site-specifically conjugated ADCs with drug-to-antibody ratios of either two or four. Both cleavable and non-cleavable linkers were combined with two different antimitotic toxins-MMAE (monomethylauristatin E) and maytansine. Nine different 2G10 ADCs were produced and tested for their ability to target uPAR in cell-based assays and a mouse model. The anti-uPAR ADC that resulted in tumor regression comprised an MMAE payload with a cathepsin B cleavable linker, 2G10-RED-244-MMAE. This work demonstrates in vitro activity of the 2G10-RED-244-MMAE in TNBC cell lines and validates uPAR as a therapeutic target for TNBC.
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- 2019
12. A response to "Personalised medicine and population health: breast and ovarian cancer".
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Antoniou, Antonis, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Borowsky, Alexander, Broeders, Mireille, Brooks, Jennifer, Chiarelli, Anna, Chiquette, Jocelyne, Cuzick, Jack, Delaloge, Suzette, Devilee, Peter, Dorval, Michael, Easton, Douglas, Eisen, Andrea, Eklund, Martin, Eloy, Laurence, Esserman, Laura, Garcia-Closas, Montserrat, Goldgar, David, Hall, Per, Knoppers, Bartha Maria, Kraft, Peter, La Croix, Andrea, Madalensky, Lisa, Mavaddat, Nasim, Mittman, Nicole, Nabi, Hermann, Olopade, Olufunmilayo, Pashayan, Nora, Schmidt, Marjanka, Shieh, Yiwey, Simard, Jacques, Stover-Fiscallini, Allison, Tice, Jeffrey A, Van't Veer, Laura, Wenger, Neil, Wolfson, Michael, Yau, Christina, and Ziv, Elad
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Humans ,Breast Neoplasms ,Ovarian Neoplasms ,Health Care Costs ,Female ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Precision Medicine ,Population Health ,Genetics & Heredity ,Genetics ,Complementary and Alternative Medicine ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine - Published
- 2019
13. Evaluation of the HER/PI3K/AKT Family Signaling Network as a Predictive Biomarker of Pathologic Complete Response for Patients With Breast Cancer Treated With Neratinib in the I-SPY 2 TRIAL.
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Wulfkuhle, Julia D, Yau, Christina, Wolf, Denise M, Vis, Daniel J, Gallagher, Rosa I, Brown-Swigart, Lamorna, Hirst, Gillian, Voest, Emile E, DeMichele, Angela, Hylton, Nola, Symmans, Fraser, Yee, Douglas, Esserman, Laura, Berry, Donald, Liu, Minetta, Park, John W, Wessels, Lodewyk FA, Van't Veer, Laura, and Petricoin, Emanuel F
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Genetics ,Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Breast Cancer - Abstract
In the I-SPY 2 TRIAL (Investigation of Serial Studies to Predict Your Therapeutic Response With Imaging and Molecular Analysis 2), the pan-erythroblastic oncogene B inhibitor neratinib was available to all hormone receptor (HR)/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) subtypes and graduated in the HR-negative/HER2-positive signature. We hypothesized that neratinib response may be predicted by baseline HER2 epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) signaling activation/phosphorylation levels independent of total levels of HER2 or EGFR proteins. Complete experimental and response data were available for between 130 and 193 patients. In qualifying analyses, which used logistic regression and treatment interaction analysis, 18 protein/phosphoprotein, 10 mRNA, and 12 DNA biomarkers that related to HER family signaling were evaluated. Exploratory analyses used Wilcoxon rank sum and t tests without multiple comparison correction. HER pathway DNA biomarkers were either low prevalence or nonpredictive. In expression biomarker analysis, only one gene (STMN1) was specifically associated with response to neratinib in the HER2-negative subset. In qualifying protein/phosphoprotein analyses that used reverse phase protein microarrays, six HER family markers were associated with neratinib response. After analysis was adjusted for HR/HER2 status, EGFR Y1173 (pEGFR) showed a significant biomarker-by-treatment interaction (P = .049). Exploratory analysis of HER family signaling in patients with triple-negative (TN) disease found that activation of EGFR Y1173 (P = .005) and HER2 Y1248 (pHER2) (P = .019) were positively associated with pathologic complete response. Exploratory analysis in this pEGFR/pHER2-activated TN subgroup identified elevated levels of estrogen receptor α (P < .006) in these patients. Activation of HER family phosphoproteins associates with response to neratinib, but only EGFR Y1173 and STMN1 appear to add value to the graduating signature. Activation of HER2 and EGFR in TN tumors may identify patients whose diseases respond to neratinib and implies that there is a subset of patients with TN disease who paradoxically exhibit HER family signaling activation and may achieve clinical benefit with neratinib; this concept must be validated in future studies.
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- 2018
14. Intratumor Heterogeneity of the Estrogen Receptor and the Long-term Risk of Fatal Breast Cancer.
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Lindström, Linda S, Yau, Christina, Czene, Kamila, Thompson, Carlie K, Hoadley, Katherine A, Van't Veer, Laura J, Balassanian, Ron, Bishop, John W, Carpenter, Philip M, Chen, Yunn-Yi, Datnow, Brian, Hasteh, Farnaz, Krings, Gregor, Lin, Fritz, Zhang, Yanhong, Nordenskjöld, Bo, Stål, Olle, Benz, Christopher C, Fornander, Tommy, Borowsky, Alexander D, Esserman, Laura J, and STO Trialists Group
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STO Trialists Group ,Humans ,Breast Neoplasms ,Tamoxifen ,Receptors ,Estrogen ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Hormonal ,Chemotherapy ,Adjuvant ,Registries ,Risk Factors ,Survival Analysis ,Retrospective Studies ,Time Factors ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Sweden ,Female ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Neoplasm Grading ,Breast Cancer ,Estrogen ,Cancer ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis - Abstract
BackgroundBreast cancer patients with estrogen receptor (ER)-positive disease have a continuous long-term risk for fatal breast cancer, but the biological factors influencing this risk are unknown. We aimed to determine whether high intratumor heterogeneity of ER predicts an increased long-term risk (25 years) of fatal breast cancer.MethodsThe STO-3 trial enrolled 1780 postmenopausal lymph node-negative breast cancer patients randomly assigned to receive adjuvant tamoxifen vs not. The fraction of cancer cells for each ER intensity level was scored by breast cancer pathologists, and intratumor heterogeneity of ER was calculated using Rao's quadratic entropy and categorized into high and low heterogeneity using a predefined cutoff at the second tertile (67%). Long-term breast cancer-specific survival analyses by intra-tumor heterogeneity of ER were performed using Kaplan-Meier and multivariable Cox proportional hazard modeling adjusting for patient and tumor characteristics.ResultsA statistically significant difference in long-term survival by high vs low intratumor heterogeneity of ER was seen for all ER-positive patients (P < .001) and for patients with luminal A subtype tumors (P = .01). In multivariable analyses, patients with high intratumor heterogeneity of ER had a twofold increased long-term risk as compared with patients with low intratumor heterogeneity (ER-positive: hazard ratio [HR] = 1.98, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.31 to 3.00; luminal A subtype tumors: HR = 2.43, 95% CI = 1.18 to 4.99).ConclusionsPatients with high intratumor heterogeneity of ER had an increased long-term risk of fatal breast cancer. Interestingly, a similar long-term risk increase was seen in patients with luminal A subtype tumors. Our findings suggest that intratumor heterogeneity of ER is an independent long-term prognosticator with potential to change clinical management, especially for patients with luminal A tumors.
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- 2018
15. Publisher Correction: Evidence that breast cancer risk at the 2q35 locus is mediated through IGFBP5 regulation.
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Ghoussaini, Maya, Edwards, Stacey L, Michailidou, Kyriaki, Nord, Silje, Cowper-Sal Lari, Richard, Desai, Kinjal, Kar, Siddhartha, Hillman, Kristine M, Kaufmann, Susanne, Glubb, Dylan M, Beesley, Jonathan, Dennis, Joe, Bolla, Manjeet K, Wang, Qin, Dicks, Ed, Guo, Qi, Schmidt, Marjanka K, Shah, Mitul, Luben, Robert, Brown, Judith, Czene, Kamila, Darabi, Hatef, Eriksson, Mikael, Klevebring, Daniel, Bojesen, Stig E, Nordestgaard, Børge G, Nielsen, Sune F, Flyger, Henrik, Lambrechts, Diether, Thienpont, Bernard, Neven, Patrick, Wildiers, Hans, Broeks, Annegien, Van't Veer, Laura J, Rutgers, Emiel J Th, Couch, Fergus J, Olson, Janet E, Hallberg, Emily, Vachon, Celine, Chang-Claude, Jenny, Rudolph, Anja, Seibold, Petra, Flesch-Janys, Dieter, Peto, Julian, Dos-Santos-Silva, Isabel, Gibson, Lorna, Nevanlinna, Heli, Muranen, Taru A, Aittomäki, Kristiina, Blomqvist, Carl, Hall, Per, Li, Jingmei, Liu, Jianjun, Humphreys, Keith, Kang, Daehee, Choi, Ji-Yeob, Park, Sue K, Noh, Dong-Young, Matsuo, Keitaro, Ito, Hidemi, Iwata, Hiroji, Yatabe, Yasushi, Guénel, Pascal, Truong, Thérèse, Menegaux, Florence, Sanchez, Marie, Burwinkel, Barbara, Marme, Frederik, Schneeweiss, Andreas, Sohn, Christof, Wu, Anna H, Tseng, Chiu-Chen, Van Den Berg, David, Stram, Daniel O, Benitez, Javier, Pilar Zamora, M, Perez, Jose Ignacio Arias, Menéndez, Primitiva, Shu, Xiao-Ou, Lu, Wei, Gao, Yu-Tang, Cai, Qiuyin, Cox, Angela, Cross, Simon S, Reed, Malcolm WR, Andrulis, Irene L, Knight, Julia A, Glendon, Gord, Tchatchou, Sandrine, Sawyer, Elinor J, Tomlinson, Ian, Kerin, Michael J, Miller, Nicola, Haiman, Christopher A, Henderson, Brian E, Schumacher, Fredrick, Le Marchand, Loic, Lindblom, Annika, Margolin, Sara, and Teo, Soo Hwang
- Abstract
This corrects the article DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5999.
- Published
- 2018
16. New Horizons in Advocacy Engaged Physical Sciences and Oncology Research
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Samson, Susan, Northey, Jason J, Plaks, Vicki, Baas, Carole, Dean, Ivory, LaBarge, Mark A, Goga, Andrei, Van't Veer, Laura J, and Weaver, Valerie M
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Cancer ,Biomedical Engineering ,Biomedical Research ,Humans ,Medical Oncology ,National Cancer Institute (U.S.) ,Neoplasms ,Physics ,Research Design ,Social Control ,Formal ,United States ,Advocacy engagement ,convergent science ,physical sciences in oncology ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
To address cancer as a multifaceted adaptive system, the increasing momentum for cross-disciplinary connectivity between cancer biologists, physical scientists, mathematicians, chemists, biomedical engineers, computer scientists, clinicians, and advocates is fueling the emergence of new scientific frontiers, principles, and opportunities within physical sciences and oncology. In parallel to highlighting the advances, challenges, and acceptance of advocates as credible contributors, we offer recommendations for addressing real world hurdles in advancing equitable partnerships among advocacy stakeholders.
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- 2018
17. Correction: Publisher Correction: Evidence that breast cancer risk at the 2q35 locus is mediated through IGFBP5 regulation
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Ghoussaini, Maya, Edwards, Stacey L, Michailidou, Kyriaki, Nord, Silje, Cowper-Sal·lari, Richard, Desai, Kinjal, Kar, Siddhartha, Hillman, Kristine M, Kaufmann, Susanne, Glubb, Dylan M, Beesley, Jonathan, Dennis, Joe, Bolla, Manjeet K, Wang, Qin, Dicks, Ed, Guo, Qi, Schmidt, Marjanka K, Shah, Mitul, Luben, Robert, Brown, Judith, Czene, Kamila, Darabi, Hatef, Eriksson, Mikael, Klevebring, Daniel, Bojesen, Stig E, Nordestgaard, Børge G, Nielsen, Sune F, Flyger, Henrik, Lambrechts, Diether, Thienpont, Bernard, Neven, Patrick, Wildiers, Hans, Broeks, Annegien, Van’t Veer, Laura J, Rutgers, Emiel J Th, Couch, Fergus J, Olson, Janet E, Hallberg, Emily, Vachon, Celine, Chang-Claude, Jenny, Rudolph, Anja, Seibold, Petra, Flesch-Janys, Dieter, Peto, Julian, dos-Santos-Silva, Isabel, Gibson, Lorna, Nevanlinna, Heli, Muranen, Taru A, Aittomäki, Kristiina, Blomqvist, Carl, Hall, Per, Li, Jingmei, Liu, Jianjun, Humphreys, Keith, Kang, Daehee, Choi, Ji-Yeob, Park, Sue K, Noh, Dong-Young, Matsuo, Keitaro, Ito, Hidemi, Iwata, Hiroji, Yatabe, Yasushi, Guénel, Pascal, Truong, Thérèse, Menegaux, Florence, Sanchez, Marie, Burwinkel, Barbara, Marme, Frederik, Schneeweiss, Andreas, Sohn, Christof, Wu, Anna H, Tseng, Chiu-chen, Van Den Berg, David, Stram, Daniel O, Benitez, Javier, Pilar Zamora, M, Perez, Jose Ignacio Arias, Menéndez, Primitiva, Shu, Xiao-Ou, Lu, Wei, Gao, Yu-Tang, Cai, Qiuyin, Cox, Angela, Cross, Simon S, Reed, Malcolm WR, Andrulis, Irene L, Knight, Julia A, Glendon, Gord, Tchatchou, Sandrine, Sawyer, Elinor J, Tomlinson, Ian, Kerin, Michael J, Miller, Nicola, Haiman, Christopher A, Henderson, Brian E, Schumacher, Fredrick, Le Marchand, Loic, Lindblom, Annika, Margolin, Sara, and Teo, Soo Hwang
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Breast Cancer ,Cancer ,Women's Health - Abstract
This corrects the article DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5999.
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- 2018
18. Genomic and expression profiling reveal molecular heterogeneity of disseminated tumor cells in bone marrow of early breast cancer
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Magbanua, Mark Jesus M, Rugo, Hope S, Hauranieh, Louai, Roy, Ritu, Scott, Janet H, Lee, Jen Chieh, Hsiao, Feng, Sosa, Eduardo V, van’t Veer, Laura, Esserman, Laura J, and Park, John W
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Genetics ,Stem Cell Research ,Biotechnology ,Cancer Genomics ,Women's Health ,Cancer ,Breast Cancer ,Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Human ,Clinical Research ,Human Genome ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,Clinical sciences ,Oncology and carcinogenesis ,Epidemiology - Abstract
Detection of disseminated tumor cells (DTCs) in bone marrow is an established negative prognostic factor. We isolated small pools of (~20) EPCAM-positive DTCs from early breast cancer patients for genomic profiling. Genome-wide copy number profiles of DTC pools (n = 45) appeared less aberrant than the corresponding primary tumors (PT, n = 16). PIK3CA mutations were detected in 26% of DTC pools (n = 53), none of them were shared with matched PTs. Expression profiling of DTC pools (n = 30) confirmed the upregulation of EPCAM expression and certain oncogenes (e.g., MYC and CCNE1), as well as the absence of hematopoietic features. Two expression subtypes were observed: (1) luminal with dual epithelial-mesenchymal properties (high ESR1 and VIM/CAV1 expression), and (2) basal-like with proliferative/stem cell-like phenotype (low ESR1 and high MKI67/ALDH1A1 expression). We observed high discordance between ESR1 (40%) and ERRB2 (43%) expression in DTC pools vs. the clinical ER and HER2 status of the corresponding primary tumors, suggesting plasticity of biomarker status during dissemination to the bone marrow. Comparison of expression profiles of DTC pools with available data from circulating tumor cells (CTCs) of metastatic breast cancer patients revealed gene expression signatures in DTCs that were unique from those of CTCs. For example, ALDH1A1, CAV1, and VIM were upregulated in DTC pools relative to CTCs. Taken together, analysis of pooled DTCs revealed molecular heterogeneity, possible genetic divergence from corresponding primary tumor, and two distinct subpopulations. Validation in larger cohorts is needed to confirm the presence of these molecular subtypes and to evaluate their biological and clinical significance.
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- 2018
19. Health outcomes, environmental impacts, and diet costs of adherence to the EAT-LancetDiet in China in 1997–2015: a health and nutrition survey
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Cai, Hongyi, Talsma, Elise F, Chang, Zhiyao, Wen, Xin, Fan, Shenggen, van't Veer, Pieter, and Biesbroek, Sander
- Abstract
In 2019, the EAT-LancetCommission proposed a global reference dietary pattern. Although research on the EAT-Lancetreference diet and its associations with mortality, cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, dietary environmental impacts, and cost of diets is increasing, studies done in low-income and middle-income countries remain scarce. This study aimed to assess the health outcomes, environmental impacts, and dietary costs of adherence to the EAT-Lancetreference diet in China.
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- 2024
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20. Context Analysis, Needs Assessment and Persona Development: Towards a Digital Game-Like Intervention for High Functioning Children with ASD to Train Social Skills
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Terlouw, G., van't Veer, J. T. B., Kuipers, D. A., and Metselaar, J.
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Children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) often face challenges in social situations. Although designers and researchers explore the potential of digital (game-like) interventions, most interventions lack evidence in efficacy or proper design. The aim of this study is to explore the worldview and needs of the target users in their daily life context and convert them into authentic and lifelike personas and guidelines for design. To get insight in the user group's worldview and needs we conducted focus groups with children with ASD (n = 8), focus groups with parents (n = 6) and stakeholder interviews (n = 7). Different generative and exploratory methods were used during the interviews. We present the findings on the three main topics: everyday life, social skill training, and video games. The findings resulted in three authentic and lifelike personas. To develop a successful new game-like intervention the children's needs must be more explicitly addressed in the design. The user-centered approach makes clear that children with ASD have different goals to pursue then their parents and professionals.
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- 2020
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21. Prediction of contralateral breast cancer: external validation of risk calculators in 20 international cohorts
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Giardiello, Daniele, Hauptmann, Michael, Steyerberg, Ewout W., Adank, Muriel A., Akdeniz, Delal, Blom, Jannet C., Blomqvist, Carl, Bojesen, Stig E., Bolla, Manjeet K., Brinkhuis, Mariël, Chang-Claude, Jenny, Czene, Kamila, Devilee, Peter, Dunning, Alison M., Easton, Douglas F., Eccles, Diana M., Fasching, Peter A., Figueroa, Jonine, Flyger, Henrik, García-Closas, Montserrat, Haeberle, Lothar, Haiman, Christopher A., Hall, Per, Hamann, Ute, Hopper, John L., Jager, Agnes, Jakubowska, Anna, Jung, Audrey, Keeman, Renske, Koppert, Linetta B., Kramer, Iris, Lambrechts, Diether, Le Marchand, Loic, Lindblom, Annika, Lubiński, Jan, Manoochehri, Mehdi, Mariani, Luigi, Nevanlinna, Heli, Oldenburg, Hester S. A., Pelders, Saskia, Pharoah, Paul D. P., Shah, Mitul, Siesling, Sabine, Smit, Vincent T. H. B. M., Southey, Melissa C., Tapper, William J., Tollenaar, Rob A. E. M., van den Broek, Alexandra J., van Deurzen, Carolien H. M., van Leeuwen, Flora E., van Ongeval, Chantal, Van’t Veer, Laura J., Wang, Qin, Wendt, Camilla, Westenend, Pieter J., Hooning, Maartje J., and Schmidt, Marjanka K.
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- 2020
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22. Is nutrition science ready for the twenty-first century? Moving towards transdisciplinary impacts in a changing world
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Tufford, Adèle R., Calder, Philip C., Van’t Veer, Pieter, Feskens, Edith F., Ockhuizen, Theo, Kraneveld, Aletta D., Sikkema, Jan, and de Vries, Jan
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- 2020
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23. The heel-induced sway force and yaw moment of a high-speed craft in following regular waves
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Bonci, Matteo, De Jong, Pepijn, Van Walree, Frans, Renilson, Martin, Keuning, Jan Alexander, and Van’t Veer, Riaan
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- 2020
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24. The Neoadjuvant Model Is Still the Future for Drug Development in Breast Cancer.
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DeMichele, Angela, Yee, Douglas, Berry, Donald A, Albain, Kathy S, Benz, Christopher C, Boughey, Judy, Buxton, Meredith, Chia, Stephen K, Chien, Amy J, Chui, Stephen Y, Clark, Amy, Edmiston, Kirsten, Elias, Anthony D, Forero-Torres, Andres, Haddad, Tufia C, Haley, Barbara, Haluska, Paul, Hylton, Nola M, Isaacs, Claudine, Kaplan, Henry, Korde, Larissa, Leyland-Jones, Brian, Liu, Minetta C, Melisko, Michelle, Minton, Susan E, Moulder, Stacy L, Nanda, Rita, Olopade, Olufunmilayo I, Paoloni, Melissa, Park, John W, Parker, Barbara A, Perlmutter, Jane, Petricoin, Emanuel F, Rugo, Hope, Symmans, Fraser, Tripathy, Debasish, van't Veer, Laura J, Viscusi, Rebecca K, Wallace, Anne, Wolf, Denise, Yau, Christina, and Esserman, Laura J
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Humans ,Breast Neoplasms ,Treatment Outcome ,Chemotherapy ,Adjuvant ,Neoadjuvant Therapy ,Female ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Drug Discovery ,Clinical Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Cancer ,Breast Cancer ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis - Abstract
The many improvements in breast cancer therapy in recent years have so lowered rates of recurrence that it is now difficult or impossible to conduct adequately powered adjuvant clinical trials. Given the many new drugs and potential synergistic combinations, the neoadjuvant approach has been used to test benefit of drug combinations in clinical trials of primary breast cancer. A recent FDA-led meta-analysis showed that pathologic complete response (pCR) predicts disease-free survival (DFS) within patients who have specific breast cancer subtypes. This meta-analysis motivated the FDA's draft guidance for using pCR as a surrogate endpoint in accelerated drug approval. Using pCR as a registration endpoint was challenged at ASCO 2014 Annual Meeting with the presentation of ALTTO, an adjuvant trial in HER2-positive breast cancer that showed a nonsignificant reduction in DFS hazard rate for adding lapatinib, a HER-family tyrosine kinase inhibitor, to trastuzumab and chemotherapy. This conclusion seemed to be inconsistent with the results of NeoALTTO, a neoadjuvant trial that found a statistical improvement in pCR rate for the identical lapatinib-containing regimen. We address differences in the two trials that may account for discordant conclusions. However, we use the FDA meta-analysis to show that there is no discordance at all between the observed pCR difference in NeoALTTO and the observed HR in ALTTO. This underscores the importance of appropriately modeling the two endpoints when designing clinical trials. The I-SPY 2/3 neoadjuvant trials exemplify this approach.
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- 2015
25. Erratum to: Modeling precision treatment of breast cancer.
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Daemen, Anneleen, Griffith, Obi L, Heiser, Laura M, Wang, Nicholas J, Enache, Oana M, Sanborn, Zachary, Pepin, Francois, Durinck, Steffen, Korkola, James E, Griffith, Malachi, Hur, Joe S, Huh, Nam, Chung, Jongsuk, Cope, Leslie, Fackler, Mary Jo, Umbricht, Christopher, Sukumar, Saraswati, Seth, Pankaj, Sukhatme, Vikas P, Jakkula, Lakshmi R, Lu, Yiling, Mills, Gordon B, Cho, Raymond J, Collisson, Eric A, Van't Veer, Laura J, Spellman, Paul T, and Gray, Joe W
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Bioinformatics ,Environmental Sciences ,Biological Sciences ,Information and Computing Sciences - Abstract
During the type-setting of the final version of the article [1] some of the additional files were swapped. The correct files are republished in this Erratum.
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- 2015
26. Fine-mapping identifies two additional breast cancer susceptibility loci at 9q31.2.
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Orr, Nick, Dudbridge, Frank, Dryden, Nicola, Maguire, Sarah, Novo, Daniela, Perrakis, Eleni, Johnson, Nichola, Ghoussaini, Maya, Hopper, John L, Southey, Melissa C, Apicella, Carmel, Stone, Jennifer, Schmidt, Marjanka K, Broeks, Annegien, Van't Veer, Laura J, Hogervorst, Frans B, Fasching, Peter A, Haeberle, Lothar, Ekici, Arif B, Beckmann, Matthias W, Gibson, Lorna, Aitken, Zoe, Warren, Helen, Sawyer, Elinor, Tomlinson, Ian, Kerin, Michael J, Miller, Nicola, Burwinkel, Barbara, Marme, Frederik, Schneeweiss, Andreas, Sohn, Chistof, Guénel, Pascal, Truong, Thérèse, Cordina-Duverger, Emilie, Sanchez, Marie, Bojesen, Stig E, Nordestgaard, Børge G, Nielsen, Sune F, Flyger, Henrik, Benitez, Javier, Zamora, Maria Pilar, Arias Perez, Jose Ignacio, Menéndez, Primitiva, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Neuhausen, Susan L, Brenner, Hermann, Dieffenbach, Aida Karina, Arndt, Volker, Stegmaier, Christa, Hamann, Ute, Brauch, Hiltrud, Justenhoven, Christina, Brüning, Thomas, Ko, Yon-Dschun, Nevanlinna, Heli, Aittomäki, Kristiina, Blomqvist, Carl, Khan, Sofia, Bogdanova, Natalia, Dörk, Thilo, Lindblom, Annika, Margolin, Sara, Mannermaa, Arto, Kataja, Vesa, Kosma, Veli-Matti, Hartikainen, Jaana M, Chenevix-Trench, Georgia, Beesley, Jonathan, Lambrechts, Diether, Moisse, Matthieu, Floris, Guiseppe, Beuselinck, Benoit, Chang-Claude, Jenny, Rudolph, Anja, Seibold, Petra, Flesch-Janys, Dieter, Radice, Paolo, Peterlongo, Paolo, Peissel, Bernard, Pensotti, Valeria, Couch, Fergus J, Olson, Janet E, Slettedahl, Seth, Vachon, Celine, Giles, Graham G, Milne, Roger L, McLean, Catriona, Haiman, Christopher A, Henderson, Brian E, Schumacher, Fredrick, Le Marchand, Loic, Simard, Jacques, Goldberg, Mark S, Labrèche, France, Dumont, Martine, Kristensen, Vessela, Alnæs, Grethe Grenaker, Nord, Silje, Borresen-Dale, Anne-Lise, and Zheng, Wei
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GENICA Network ,kConFab Investigators ,Australian Ovarian Cancer Study Group ,Chromosomes ,Human ,Pair 9 ,Humans ,Breast Neoplasms ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Estrogen Receptor alpha ,Risk ,Chromosome Mapping ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Adult ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Female ,GATA3 Transcription Factor ,Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor 3-alpha ,Kruppel-Like Transcription Factors ,Enhancer Elements ,Genetic ,Genetic Loci ,Genetic Association Studies ,Kruppel-Like Factor 4 ,Asian People ,White People ,Cancer ,Breast Cancer ,Biotechnology ,Genetics ,Human Genome ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Genetics & Heredity - Abstract
We recently identified a novel susceptibility variant, rs865686, for estrogen-receptor positive breast cancer at 9q31.2. Here, we report a fine-mapping analysis of the 9q31.2 susceptibility locus using 43 160 cases and 42 600 controls of European ancestry ascertained from 52 studies and a further 5795 cases and 6624 controls of Asian ancestry from nine studies. Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs676256 was most strongly associated with risk in Europeans (odds ratios [OR] = 0.90 [0.88-0.92]; P-value = 1.58 × 10(-25)). This SNP is one of a cluster of highly correlated variants, including rs865686, that spans ∼14.5 kb. We identified two additional independent association signals demarcated by SNPs rs10816625 (OR = 1.12 [1.08-1.17]; P-value = 7.89 × 10(-09)) and rs13294895 (OR = 1.09 [1.06-1.12]; P-value = 2.97 × 10(-11)). SNP rs10816625, but not rs13294895, was also associated with risk of breast cancer in Asian individuals (OR = 1.12 [1.06-1.18]; P-value = 2.77 × 10(-05)). Functional genomic annotation using data derived from breast cancer cell-line models indicates that these SNPs localise to putative enhancer elements that bind known drivers of hormone-dependent breast cancer, including ER-α, FOXA1 and GATA-3. In vitro analyses indicate that rs10816625 and rs13294895 have allele-specific effects on enhancer activity and suggest chromatin interactions with the KLF4 gene locus. These results demonstrate the power of dense genotyping in large studies to identify independent susceptibility variants. Analysis of associations using subjects with different ancestry, combined with bioinformatic and genomic characterisation, can provide strong evidence for the likely causative alleles and their functional basis.
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- 2015
27. Lessons learned during implementation of MR-guided High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound treatment of uterine fibroids
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Anneveldt, K. J., Verpalen, I. M., Nijholt, I. M., Dijkstra, J. R., van den Hoed, R. D., van’t Veer-ten Kate, M., de Boer, E., van Osch, J. A. C., Heijman, E., Naber, H. R., Ista, E., Franx, A., Veersema, S., Huirne, J. A. F., Schutte, J. M., and Boomsma, M. F.
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- 2021
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28. Identification and characterization of novel associations in the CASP8/ALS2CR12 region on chromosome 2 with breast cancer risk.
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Lin, Wei-Yu, Camp, Nicola J, Ghoussaini, Maya, Beesley, Jonathan, Michailidou, Kyriaki, Hopper, John L, Apicella, Carmel, Southey, Melissa C, Stone, Jennifer, Schmidt, Marjanka K, Broeks, Annegien, Van't Veer, Laura J, Th Rutgers, Emiel J, Muir, Kenneth, Lophatananon, Artitaya, Stewart-Brown, Sarah, Siriwanarangsan, Pornthep, Fasching, Peter A, Haeberle, Lothar, Ekici, Arif B, Beckmann, Matthias W, Peto, Julian, Dos-Santos-Silva, Isabel, Fletcher, Olivia, Johnson, Nichola, Bolla, Manjeet K, Wang, Qin, Dennis, Joe, Sawyer, Elinor J, Cheng, Timothy, Tomlinson, Ian, Kerin, Michael J, Miller, Nicola, Marmé, Frederik, Surowy, Harald M, Burwinkel, Barbara, Guénel, Pascal, Truong, Thérèse, Menegaux, Florence, Mulot, Claire, Bojesen, Stig E, Nordestgaard, Børge G, Nielsen, Sune F, Flyger, Henrik, Benitez, Javier, Zamora, M Pilar, Arias Perez, Jose Ignacio, Menéndez, Primitiva, González-Neira, Anna, Pita, Guillermo, Alonso, M Rosario, Alvarez, Nuria, Herrero, Daniel, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Brenner, Hermann, Dieffenbach, Aida Karina, Arndt, Volker, Stegmaier, Christa, Meindl, Alfons, Lichtner, Peter, Schmutzler, Rita K, Müller-Myhsok, Bertram, Brauch, Hiltrud, Brüning, Thomas, Ko, Yon-Dschun, GENICA Network, Tessier, Daniel C, Vincent, Daniel, Bacot, Francois, Nevanlinna, Heli, Aittomäki, Kristiina, Blomqvist, Carl, Khan, Sofia, Matsuo, Keitaro, Ito, Hidemi, Iwata, Hiroji, Horio, Akiyo, Bogdanova, Natalia V, Antonenkova, Natalia N, Dörk, Thilo, Lindblom, Annika, Margolin, Sara, Mannermaa, Arto, Kataja, Vesa, Kosma, Veli-Matti, Hartikainen, Jaana M, kConFab Investigators, Australian Ovarian Cancer Study Group, Wu, Anna H, Tseng, Chiu-Chen, Van Den Berg, David, Stram, Daniel O, Neven, Patrick, Wauters, Els, Wildiers, Hans, Lambrechts, Diether, Chang-Claude, Jenny, Rudolph, Anja, Seibold, Petra, and Flesch-Janys, Dieter
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GENICA Network ,kConFab Investigators ,Australian Ovarian Cancer Study Group ,Breast and Ovarian Cancer Susceptibility (BOCS) Study ,Chromosomes ,Human ,Pair 2 ,Humans ,Breast Neoplasms ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Proteins ,Case-Control Studies ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,European Continental Ancestry Group ,Female ,Caspase 8 ,CASP8 and FADD-Like Apoptosis Regulating Protein ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Genotyping Techniques ,Chromosomes ,Human ,Pair 2 ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Prevention ,Genetics ,Human Genome ,Breast Cancer ,Cancer ,Biotechnology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Genetics & Heredity - Abstract
Previous studies have suggested that polymorphisms in CASP8 on chromosome 2 are associated with breast cancer risk. To clarify the role of CASP8 in breast cancer susceptibility, we carried out dense genotyping of this region in the Breast Cancer Association Consortium (BCAC). Single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) spanning a 1 Mb region around CASP8 were genotyped in 46 450 breast cancer cases and 42 600 controls of European origin from 41 studies participating in the BCAC as part of a custom genotyping array experiment (iCOGS). Missing genotypes and SNPs were imputed and, after quality exclusions, 501 typed and 1232 imputed SNPs were included in logistic regression models adjusting for study and ancestry principal components. The SNPs retained in the final model were investigated further in data from nine genome-wide association studies (GWAS) comprising in total 10 052 case and 12 575 control subjects. The most significant association signal observed in European subjects was for the imputed intronic SNP rs1830298 in ALS2CR12 (telomeric to CASP8), with per allele odds ratio and 95% confidence interval [OR (95% confidence interval, CI)] for the minor allele of 1.05 (1.03-1.07), P = 1 × 10(-5). Three additional independent signals from intronic SNPs were identified, in CASP8 (rs36043647), ALS2CR11 (rs59278883) and CFLAR (rs7558475). The association with rs1830298 was replicated in the imputed results from the combined GWAS (P = 3 × 10(-6)), yielding a combined OR (95% CI) of 1.06 (1.04-1.08), P = 1 × 10(-9). Analyses of gene expression associations in peripheral blood and normal breast tissue indicate that CASP8 might be the target gene, suggesting a mechanism involving apoptosis.
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- 2015
29. Evidence that breast cancer risk at the 2q35 locus is mediated through IGFBP5 regulation.
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Ghoussaini, Maya, Edwards, Stacey L, Michailidou, Kyriaki, Nord, Silje, Cowper-Sal Lari, Richard, Desai, Kinjal, Kar, Siddhartha, Hillman, Kristine M, Kaufmann, Susanne, Glubb, Dylan M, Beesley, Jonathan, Dennis, Joe, Bolla, Manjeet K, Wang, Qin, Dicks, Ed, Guo, Qi, Schmidt, Marjanka K, Shah, Mitul, Luben, Robert, Brown, Judith, Czene, Kamila, Darabi, Hatef, Eriksson, Mikael, Klevebring, Daniel, Bojesen, Stig E, Nordestgaard, Børge G, Nielsen, Sune F, Flyger, Henrik, Lambrechts, Diether, Thienpont, Bernard, Neven, Patrick, Wildiers, Hans, Broeks, Annegien, Van't Veer, Laura J, Th Rutgers, Emiel J, Couch, Fergus J, Olson, Janet E, Hallberg, Emily, Vachon, Celine, Chang-Claude, Jenny, Rudolph, Anja, Seibold, Petra, Flesch-Janys, Dieter, Peto, Julian, Dos-Santos-Silva, Isabel, Gibson, Lorna, Nevanlinna, Heli, Muranen, Taru A, Aittomäki, Kristiina, Blomqvist, Carl, Hall, Per, Li, Jingmei, Liu, Jianjun, Humphreys, Keith, Kang, Daehee, Choi, Ji-Yeob, Park, Sue K, Noh, Dong-Young, Matsuo, Keitaro, Ito, Hidemi, Iwata, Hiroji, Yatabe, Yasushi, Guénel, Pascal, Truong, Thérèse, Menegaux, Florence, Sanchez, Marie, Burwinkel, Barbara, Marme, Frederik, Schneeweiss, Andreas, Sohn, Christof, Wu, Anna H, Tseng, Chiu-Chen, Van Den Berg, David, Stram, Daniel O, Benitez, Javier, Zamora, M Pilar, Perez, Jose Ignacio Arias, Menéndez, Primitiva, Shu, Xiao-Ou, Lu, Wei, Gao, Yu-Tang, Cai, Qiuyin, Cox, Angela, Cross, Simon S, Reed, Malcolm WR, Andrulis, Irene L, Knight, Julia A, Glendon, Gord, Tchatchou, Sandrine, Sawyer, Elinor J, Tomlinson, Ian, Kerin, Michael J, Miller, Nicola, Haiman, Christopher A, Henderson, Brian E, Schumacher, Fredrick, Le Marchand, Loic, Lindblom, Annika, Margolin, Sara, and Teo, Soo Hwang
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Australian Ovarian Cancer Management Group ,Cell Line ,Tumor ,Chromosomes ,Human ,Pair 2 ,Chromatin ,Humans ,Breast Neoplasms ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Insulin-Like Growth Factor Binding Protein 5 ,RNA ,Messenger ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Female ,Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor 3-alpha ,Promoter Regions ,Genetic ,MCF-7 Cells ,Cell Line ,Tumor ,Chromosomes ,Human ,Pair 2 ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Promoter Regions ,Genetic ,RNA ,Messenger - Abstract
GWAS have identified a breast cancer susceptibility locus on 2q35. Here we report the fine mapping of this locus using data from 101,943 subjects from 50 case-control studies. We genotype 276 SNPs using the 'iCOGS' genotyping array and impute genotypes for a further 1,284 using 1000 Genomes Project data. All but two, strongly correlated SNPs (rs4442975 G/T and rs6721996 G/A) are excluded as candidate causal variants at odds against >100:1. The best functional candidate, rs4442975, is associated with oestrogen receptor positive (ER+) disease with an odds ratio (OR) in Europeans of 0.85 (95% confidence interval=0.84-0.87; P=1.7 × 10(-43)) per t-allele. This SNP flanks a transcriptional enhancer that physically interacts with the promoter of IGFBP5 (encoding insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 5) and displays allele-specific gene expression, FOXA1 binding and chromatin looping. Evidence suggests that the g-allele confers increased breast cancer susceptibility through relative downregulation of IGFBP5, a gene with known roles in breast cell biology.
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- 2014
30. Genetic variation at CYP3A is associated with age at menarche and breast cancer risk: a case-control study.
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Johnson, Nichola, Dudbridge, Frank, Orr, Nick, Gibson, Lorna, Jones, Michael E, Schoemaker, Minouk J, Folkerd, Elizabeth J, Haynes, Ben P, Hopper, John L, Southey, Melissa C, Dite, Gillian S, Apicella, Carmel, Schmidt, Marjanka K, Broeks, Annegien, Van't Veer, Laura J, Atsma, Femke, Muir, Kenneth, Lophatananon, Artitaya, Fasching, Peter A, Beckmann, Matthias W, Ekici, Arif B, Renner, Stefan P, Sawyer, Elinor, Tomlinson, Ian, Kerin, Michael, Miller, Nicola, Burwinkel, Barbara, Marme, Frederik, Schneeweiss, Andreas, Sohn, Christof, Guénel, Pascal, Truong, Therese, Cordina, Emilie, Menegaux, Florence, Bojesen, Stig E, Nordestgaard, Børge G, Flyger, Henrik, Milne, Roger, Zamora, M Pilar, Arias Perez, Jose Ignacio, Benitez, Javier, Bernstein, Leslie, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Ziogas, Argyrios, Clarke Dur, Christina, Brenner, Hermann, Müller, Heiko, Arndt, Volker, Dieffenbach, Aida Karina, Meindl, Alfons, Heil, Joerg, Bartram, Claus R, Schmutzler, Rita K, Brauch, Hiltrud, Justenhoven, Christina, Ko, Yon-Dschun, GENICA (Gene Environment Interaction and Breast Cancer in Germany) Network, Nevanlinna, Heli, Muranen, Taru A, Aittomäki, Kristiina, Blomqvist, Carl, Matsuo, Keitaro, Dörk, Thilo, Bogdanova, Natalia V, Antonenkova, Natalia N, Lindblom, Annika, Mannermaa, Arto, Kataja, Vesa, Kosma, Veli-Matti, Hartikainen, Jaana M, Chenevix-Trench, Georgia, Beesley, Jonathan, kConFab Investigators, Australian Ovarian Cancer Study Group, Wu, Anna H, Van den Berg, David, Tseng, Chiu-Chen, Lambrechts, Diether, Smeets, Dominiek, Neven, Patrick, Wildiers, Hans, Chang-Claude, Jenny, Rudolph, Anja, Nickels, Stefan, Flesch-Janys, Dieter, Radice, Paolo, Peterlongo, Paolo, Bonanni, Bernardo, Pensotti, Valeria, Couch, Fergus J, Olson, Janet E, Wang, Xianshu, Fredericksen, Zachary, Pankratz, Vernon S, Giles, Graham G, Severi, Gianluca, Baglietto, Laura, Haiman, Chris, Simard, Jacques, and Goldberg, Mark S
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GENICA (Gene Environment Interaction and Breast Cancer in Germany) Network ,kConFab Investigators ,Australian Ovarian Cancer Study Group ,Humans ,Breast Neoplasms ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Reproductive History ,Risk Factors ,Age Factors ,Age of Onset ,Premenopause ,Menarche ,Genotype ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Adult ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,European Continental Ancestry Group ,Female ,Cytochrome P-450 CYP3A ,Genetic Association Studies ,Human Genome ,Aging ,Clinical Research ,Cancer ,Genetics ,Breast Cancer ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis - Abstract
IntroductionWe have previously shown that a tag single nucleotide polymorphism (rs10235235), which maps to the CYP3A locus (7q22.1), was associated with a reduction in premenopausal urinary estrone glucuronide levels and a modest reduction in risk of breast cancer in women age ≤50 years.MethodsWe further investigated the association of rs10235235 with breast cancer risk in a large case control study of 47,346 cases and 47,570 controls from 52 studies participating in the Breast Cancer Association Consortium. Genotyping of rs10235235 was conducted using a custom Illumina Infinium array. Stratified analyses were conducted to determine whether this association was modified by age at diagnosis, ethnicity, age at menarche or tumor characteristics.ResultsWe confirmed the association of rs10235235 with breast cancer risk for women of European ancestry but found no evidence that this association differed with age at diagnosis. Heterozygote and homozygote odds ratios (ORs) were OR = 0.98 (95% CI 0.94, 1.01; P = 0.2) and OR = 0.80 (95% CI 0.69, 0.93; P = 0.004), respectively (P(trend) = 0.02). There was no evidence of effect modification by tumor characteristics. rs10235235 was, however, associated with age at menarche in controls (P(trend) = 0.005) but not cases (P(trend) = 0.97). Consequently the association between rs10235235 and breast cancer risk differed according to age at menarche (P(het) = 0.02); the rare allele of rs10235235 was associated with a reduction in breast cancer risk for women who had their menarche age ≥15 years (OR(het) = 0.84, 95% CI 0.75, 0.94; OR(hom) = 0.81, 95% CI 0.51, 1.30; P(trend) = 0.002) but not for those who had their menarche age ≤11 years (OR(het) = 1.06, 95% CI 0.95, 1.19, OR(hom) = 1.07, 95% CI 0.67, 1.72; P(trend) = 0.29).ConclusionsTo our knowledge rs10235235 is the first single nucleotide polymorphism to be associated with both breast cancer risk and age at menarche consistent with the well-documented association between later age at menarche and a reduction in breast cancer risk. These associations are likely mediated via an effect on circulating hormone levels.
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- 2014
31. Predictive biomarkers of invasive carcinoma on excision in patients with a diagnosis of ductal carcinoma in situ of the breast by needle biopsy.
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Mori, Miki, Krings, Gregor, Chan, Loretta, Wolf, Denise, Chen, Yunn-Yi, Kerlikowske, Karla, Tlsty, Thea D, Coppe, Jean-Philippe, Matsuda, Naoko, Suzuki, Koyu, Nakamura, Seigo, and van't Veer, Laura
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Published
- 2014
32. Modeling precision treatment of breast cancer
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Daemen, Anneleen, Griffith, Obi L, Heiser, Laura M, Wang, Nicholas J, Enache, Oana M, Sanborn, Zachary, Pepin, Francois, Durinck, Steffen, Korkola, James E, Griffith, Malachi, Hur, Joe S, Huh, Nam, Chung, Jongsuk, Cope, Leslie, Fackler, Mary, Umbricht, Christopher, Sukumar, Saraswati, Seth, Pankaj, Sukhatme, Vikas P, Jakkula, Lakshmi R, Lu, Yiling, Mills, Gordon B, Cho, Raymond J, Collisson, Eric A, van’t Veer, Laura J, Spellman, Paul T, and Gray, Joe W
- Abstract
Abstract Background First-generation molecular profiles for human breast cancers have enabled the identification of features that can predict therapeutic response; however, little is known about how the various data types can best be combined to yield optimal predictors. Collections of breast cancer cell lines mirror many aspects of breast cancer molecular pathobiology, and measurements of their omic and biological therapeutic responses are well-suited for development of strategies to identify the most predictive molecular feature sets. Results We used least squares-support vector machines and random forest algorithms to identify molecular features associated with responses of a collection of 70 breast cancer cell lines to 90 experimental or approved therapeutic agents. The datasets analyzed included measurements of copy number aberrations, mutations, gene and isoform expression, promoter methylation and protein expression. Transcriptional subtype contributed strongly to response predictors for 25% of compounds, and adding other molecular data types improved prediction for 65%. No single molecular dataset consistently out-performed the others, suggesting that therapeutic response is mediated at multiple levels in the genome. Response predictors were developed and applied to TCGA data, and were found to be present in subsets of those patient samples. Conclusions These results suggest that matching patients to treatments based on transcriptional subtype will improve response rates, and inclusion of additional features from other profiling data types may provide additional benefit. Further, we suggest a systems biology strategy for guiding clinical trials so that patient cohorts most likely to respond to new therapies may be more efficiently identified.
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- 2013
33. The Athena Breast Health Network: developing a rapid learning system in breast cancer prevention, screening, treatment, and care.
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Elson, Sarah L, Hiatt, Robert A, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Howell, Lydia P, Naeim, Arash, Parker, Barbara A, Van't Veer, Laura J, Hogarth, Michael, Pierce, John P, Duwors, Robert J, Hajopoulos, Kathy, Esserman, Laura J, and Athena Breast Health Network
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Athena Breast Health Network ,Humans ,Breast Neoplasms ,Learning ,Information Services ,Female ,Breast cancer ,Learning healthcare system ,Precision medicine ,Transdisciplinary science ,Health Services ,Patient Safety ,Prevention ,Breast Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Cancer ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis - Abstract
The term breast cancer covers many different conditions, whose clinical course ranges from indolent to aggressive. However, current practice in breast cancer prevention and care, and in breast cancer epidemiology, does not take into account the heterogeneity of the disease. A comprehensive understanding of the etiology and progression of different breast cancer subtypes would enable a more patient-centered approach to breast health care: assessing an individual's risk of getting specific subtypes of the disease, providing risk-based screening and prevention recommendations, and, for those diagnosed with the disease, tailored treatment options based on risk and timing of progression and mortality. The Athena Breast Health Network is an initiative of the five University of California medical and cancer centers to prototype this approach and to enable the development of a rapid learning system-connecting risk and outcome information from a heterogeneous patient population in real time and using new knowledge from research to continuously improve the quality of care. The Network is based on integrating clinical and research processes to create a comprehensive approach to accelerating patient-centered breast health care. Since its inception in 2009, the Network has developed a multi-site, transdisciplinary collaboration that enables the learning system. The five-campus collaboration has implemented a shared informatics platform, standardized electronic patient intake questionnaires, and common biospecimen protocols, as well as new clinical programs and multi-center research projects. The Athena Breast Health Network can serve as a model of a rapid learning system that integrates epidemiologic, behavioral, and clinical research with clinical care improvements.
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- 2013
34. Geographic and socioeconomic diversity of food and nutrient intakes: a comparison of four European countries
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Mertens, Elly, Kuijsten, Anneleen, Dofková, Marcela, Mistura, Lorenza, D’Addezio, Laura, Turrini, Aida, Dubuisson, Carine, Favret, Sandra, Havard, Sabrina, Trolle, Ellen, van’t Veer, Pieter, and Geleijnse, Johanna M.
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- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The Athena Breast Health Newtork: developing a rapid learning system in breast cancer prevention, screening, treatment, and care
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Anton-Culver, H, Elson, SL, Hiatt, RA, Howell, LP, Naeim, A, Parker, BA, Van't Veer, LJ, Hogarth, JP, DuWors, RJ, Hajopoulos, K, and Esserman, LJ
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- 2013
36. CHEK2*1100delC heterozygosity in women with breast cancer associated with early death, breast cancer-specific death, and increased risk of a second breast cancer.
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Weischer, Maren, Nordestgaard, Børge G, Pharoah, Paul, Bolla, Manjeet K, Nevanlinna, Heli, Van't Veer, Laura J, Garcia-Closas, Montserrat, Hopper, John L, Hall, Per, Andrulis, Irene L, Devilee, Peter, Fasching, Peter A, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Lambrechts, Diether, Hooning, Maartje, Cox, Angela, Giles, Graham G, Burwinkel, Barbara, Lindblom, Annika, Couch, Fergus J, Mannermaa, Arto, Grenaker Alnæs, Grethe, John, Esther M, Dörk, Thilo, Flyger, Henrik, Dunning, Alison M, Wang, Qin, Muranen, Taru A, van Hien, Richard, Figueroa, Jonine, Southey, Melissa C, Czene, Kamila, Knight, Julia A, Tollenaar, Rob AEM, Beckmann, Matthias W, Ziogas, Argyrios, Christiaens, Marie-Rose, Collée, Johanna Margriet, Reed, Malcolm WR, Severi, Gianluca, Marme, Frederik, Margolin, Sara, Olson, Janet E, Kosma, Veli-Matti, Kristensen, Vessela N, Miron, Alexander, Bogdanova, Natalia, Shah, Mitul, Blomqvist, Carl, Broeks, Annegien, Sherman, Mark, Phillips, Kelly-Anne, Li, Jingmei, Liu, Jianjun, Glendon, Gord, Seynaeve, Caroline, Ekici, Arif B, Leunen, Karin, Kriege, Mieke, Cross, Simon S, Baglietto, Laura, Sohn, Christof, Wang, Xianshu, Kataja, Vesa, Børresen-Dale, Anne-Lise, Meyer, Andreas, Easton, Douglas F, Schmidt, Marjanka K, and Bojesen, Stig E
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Humans ,Breast Neoplasms ,Neoplasms ,Second Primary ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Prognosis ,Case-Control Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Genotype ,Heterozygote ,Germ-Line Mutation ,Middle Aged ,Female ,Checkpoint Kinase 2 ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Breast Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Cancer ,Prevention ,Genetics ,Estrogen ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis - Abstract
PurposeWe tested the hypotheses that CHEK2*1100delC heterozygosity is associated with increased risk of early death, breast cancer-specific death, and risk of a second breast cancer in women with a first breast cancer.Patients and methodsFrom 22 studies participating in the Breast Cancer Association Consortium, 25,571 white women with invasive breast cancer were genotyped for CHEK2*1100delC and observed for up to 20 years (median, 6.6 years). We examined risk of early death and breast cancer-specific death by estrogen receptor status and risk of a second breast cancer after a first breast cancer in prospective studies.ResultsCHEK2*1100delC heterozygosity was found in 459 patients (1.8%). In women with estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer, multifactorially adjusted hazard ratios for heterozygotes versus noncarriers were 1.43 (95% CI, 1.12 to 1.82; log-rank P = .004) for early death and 1.63 (95% CI, 1.24 to 2.15; log-rank P < .001) for breast cancer-specific death. In all women, hazard ratio for a second breast cancer was 2.77 (95% CI, 2.00 to 3.83; log-rank P < .001) increasing to 3.52 (95% CI, 2.35 to 5.27; log-rank P < .001) in women with estrogen receptor-positive first breast cancer only.ConclusionAmong women with estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer, CHEK2*1100delC heterozygosity was associated with a 1.4-fold risk of early death, a 1.6-fold risk of breast cancer-specific death, and a 3.5-fold risk of a second breast cancer. This is one of the few examples of a genetic factor that influences long-term prognosis being documented in an extensive series of women with breast cancer.
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- 2012
37. Lobular histology and response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy in invasive breast cancer
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Lips, Esther H, Mukhtar, Rita A, Yau, Christina, de Ronde, Jorma J, Livasy, Chad, Carey, Lisa A, Loo, Claudette E, Vrancken-Peeters, Marie-Jeanne TFD, Sonke, Gabe S, Berry, Donald A, van‘t Veer, Laura J, Esserman, Laura J, Wesseling, Jelle, Rodenhuis, Sjoerd, Shelley Hwang, E, and I-SPY TRIAL Investigators
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Breast Cancer ,Cancer ,Adult ,Aged ,Breast Neoplasms ,Carcinoma ,Ductal ,Breast ,Carcinoma ,Lobular ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Female ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Neoplastic ,Humans ,Mastectomy ,Segmental ,Middle Aged ,Neoadjuvant Therapy ,Neoplasm Invasiveness ,Neoplasm Staging ,Receptor ,ErbB-2 ,Treatment Outcome ,Neoadjuvant chemotherapy ,Lobular breast cancer ,Gene expression arrays ,Predictive factors ,I-SPY TRIAL Investigators ,Receptor ,erbB-2 ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Clinical sciences ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
Invasive lobular carcinoma (ILC) has been reported to be less responsive to neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) than invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC). We sought to determine whether ILC histology indeed predicts poor response to NAC by analyzing tumor characteristics such as protein expression, gene expression, and imaging features, and by comparing NAC response rates to those seen in IDC after adjustment for these factors. We combined datasets from two large prospective NAC trials, including in total 676 patients, of which 75 were of lobular histology. Eligible patients had tumors ≥3 cm in diameter or pathologic documentation of positive nodes, and underwent serial biopsies, expression microarray analysis, and MRI imaging. We compared pathologic complete response (pCR) rates and breast conservation surgery (BCS) rates between ILC and IDC, adjusted for clinicopathologic factors. On univariate analysis, ILCs were significantly less likely to have a pCR after NAC than IDCs (11 vs. 25 %, p = 0.01). However, the known differences in tumor characteristics between the two histologic types, including hormone receptor (HR) status, HER2 status, histological grade, and p53 expression, accounted for this difference with the lowest pCR rates among HR+/HER2- tumors in both ILC and IDC (7 and 5 %, respectively). ILC which were HR- and/or HER2+ had a pCR rate of 25 %. Expression subtyping, particularly the NKI 70-gene signature, was correlated with pCR, although the small numbers of ILC in each group precluded significant associations. BCS rate did not differ between IDC and ILC after adjusting for molecular characteristics. We conclude that ILC represents a heterogeneous group of tumors which are less responsive to NAC than IDC. However, this difference is explained by differences in molecular characteristics, particularly HR and HER2, and independent of lobular histology.
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- 2012
38. Xenografts faithfully recapitulate breast cancer-specific gene expression patterns of parent primary breast tumors
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Petrillo, Laura A, Wolf, Denise M, Kapoun, Ann M, Wang, Nicholas J, Barczak, Andrea, Xiao, Yuanyuan, Korkaya, Hasan, Baehner, Frederick, Lewicki, John, Wicha, Max, Park, John W, Spellman, Paul T, Gray, Joe W, van’t Veer, Laura, and Esserman, Laura J
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Immunology ,Cancer ,Breast Cancer ,Biotechnology ,Genetics ,Aldehyde Dehydrogenase 1 Family ,Animals ,Biomarkers ,Tumor ,Breast Neoplasms ,Female ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Neoplastic ,Humans ,Isoenzymes ,Mice ,Mice ,SCID ,Multigene Family ,Receptor ,ErbB-2 ,Retinal Dehydrogenase ,Treatment Outcome ,Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays ,Mouse model ,Breast cancer ,Xenograft ,Receptor subtype ,Intrinsic subtype ,ALDH1 ,CDK5/6 ,PAM50 ,Receptor ,erbB-2 ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Clinical sciences ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
Though xenografts are used extensively for drug development in breast cancer, how well xenografts reflect the breadth of primary breast tumor subtypes has not been well characterized. Moreover, few studies have compared the gene expression of xenograft tumors to the primary tumors from which they were derived. Here we investigate whether the ability of human breast tumors (n = 20) to create xenografts in immune-deficient mice is associated with breast cancer immunohistochemical (IHC) and intrinsic subtype. We also characterize how precisely the gene expression of xenografts reprises that of parent breast tumors, using hierarchical clustering and other correlation-based techniques applied to Agilent 44K gene expression data from 16 samples including four matched primary tumor-xenograft pairs. Of the breast tumors studied, 25 % (5/20) generated xenografts. Receptor and intrinsic subtype were significant predictors of xenograft success, with all (4/4) triple-negative (TN) tumors and no (0/12) HR+Her2- tumors forming xenografts (P = 0.0005). Tumor cell expression of ALDH1, a stem cell marker, trended toward successful engraftment (P = 0.14), though CDK5/6, a basal marker, did not. Though hierarchical clustering across the 500 most variable genes segregated human breast tumors from xenograft tumors, when clustering was performed over the PAM50 gene set the primary tumor-xenograft pairs clustered together, with all IHC subtypes clustered in distinct groups. Greater similarity between primary tumor-xenograft pairs relative to random pairings was confirmed by calculation of the within-pair between-pair scatter ratio (WPBPSR) distribution (P = 0.0269), though there was a shift in the xenografts toward more aggressive features including higher proliferation scores relative to the primary. Triple-negative breast tumors demonstrate superior ability to create xenografts compared to HR+ tumors, which may reflect higher proliferation or relatively stroma-independent growth of this subtype. Xenograft tumors' gene expression faithfully resembles that of their parent tumors, yet also demonstrates a shift toward more aggressive molecular features.
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- 2012
39. PREDICT Plus: development and validation of a prognostic model for early breast cancer that includes HER2
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Wishart, GC, Bajdik, CD, Dicks, E, Provenzano, E, Schmidt, MK, Sherman, M, Greenberg, DC, Green, AR, Gelmon, KA, Kosma, V-M, Olson, JE, Beckmann, MW, Winqvist, R, Cross, SS, Severi, G, Huntsman, D, Pylkäs, K, Ellis, I, Nielsen, TO, Giles, G, Blomqvist, C, Fasching, PA, Couch, FJ, Rakha, E, Foulkes, WD, Blows, FM, Bégin, LR, van't Veer, LJ, Southey, M, Nevanlinna, H, Mannermaa, A, Cox, A, Cheang, M, Baglietto, L, Caldas, C, Garcia-Closas, M, and Pharoah, PDP
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Breast Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Cancer ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Adult ,Aged ,Breast Neoplasms ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Models ,Statistical ,Prognosis ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Receptor ,ErbB-2 ,Reproducibility of Results ,Young Adult ,breast cancer ,HER2 ,prognostic model ,Receptor ,erbB-2 ,Public Health and Health Services ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
Predict (www.predict.nhs.uk) is an online, breast cancer prognostication and treatment benefit tool. The aim of this study was to incorporate the prognostic effect of HER2 status in a new version (Predict+), and to compare its performance with the original Predict and Adjuvant!. The prognostic effect of HER2 status was based on an analysis of data from 10 179 breast cancer patients from 14 studies in the Breast Cancer Association Consortium. The hazard ratio estimates were incorporated into Predict. The validation study was based on 1653 patients with early-stage invasive breast cancer identified from the British Columbia Breast Cancer Outcomes Unit. Predicted overall survival (OS) and breast cancer-specific survival (BCSS) for Predict+, Predict and Adjuvant! were compared with observed outcomes. All three models performed well for both OS and BCSS. Both Predict models provided better BCSS estimates than Adjuvant!. In the subset of patients with HER2-positive tumours, Predict+ performed substantially better than the other two models for both OS and BCSS. Predict+ is the first clinical breast cancer prognostication tool that includes tumour HER2 status. Use of the model might lead to more accurate absolute treatment benefit predictions for individual patients.
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- 2012
40. Chemotherapy response and recurrence-free survival in neoadjuvant breast cancer depends on biomarker profiles: results from the I-SPY 1 TRIAL (CALGB 150007/150012; ACRIN 6657)
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Esserman, Laura J, Berry, Donald A, Cheang, Maggie CU, Yau, Christina, Perou, Charles M, Carey, Lisa, DeMichele, Angela, Gray, Joe W, Conway-Dorsey, Kathleen, Lenburg, Marc E, Buxton, Meredith B, Davis, Sarah E, van’t Veer, Laura J, Hudis, Clifford, Chin, Koei, Wolf, Denise, Krontiras, Helen, Montgomery, Leslie, Tripathy, Debu, Lehman, Constance, Liu, Minetta C, Olopade, Olufunmilayo I, Rugo, Hope S, Carpenter, John T, Livasy, Chad, Dressler, Lynn, Chhieng, David, Singh, Baljit, Mies, Carolyn, Rabban, Joseph, Chen, Yunni-Yi, Giri, Dilip, Au, Alfred, Hylton, Nola, and The I-SPY 1 TRIAL Investigators
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Genetics ,Cancer ,Breast Cancer ,Precision Medicine ,Clinical Research ,Women's Health ,Biomedical Imaging ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,Adult ,Aged ,Anthracyclines ,Antibodies ,Monoclonal ,Humanized ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Biomarkers ,Tumor ,Breast Neoplasms ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Disease-Free Survival ,Female ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Humans ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Middle Aged ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,Multivariate Analysis ,Neoadjuvant Therapy ,Neoplasm Recurrence ,Local ,Neoplasm ,Residual ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Receptors ,Steroid ,Taxoids ,Trastuzumab ,Breast cancer ,Neoadjuvant chemotherapy ,Molecular biomarkers ,Pathologic complete response ,I-SPY 1 TRIAL Investigators ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Clinical sciences ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
Neoadjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer allows individual tumor response to be assessed depending on molecular subtype, and to judge the impact of response to therapy on recurrence-free survival (RFS). The multicenter I-SPY 1 TRIAL evaluated patients with ≥ 3 cm tumors by using early imaging and molecular signatures, with outcomes of pathologic complete response (pCR) and RFS. The current analysis was performed using data from patients who had molecular profiles and did not receive trastuzumab. The various molecular classifiers tested were highly correlated. Categorization of breast cancer by molecular signatures enhanced the ability of pCR to predict improvement in RFS compared to the population as a whole. In multivariate analysis, the molecular signatures that added to the ability of HR and HER2 receptors, clinical stage, and pCR in predicting RFS included 70-gene signature, wound healing signature, p53 mutation signature, and PAM50 risk of recurrence. The low risk signatures were associated with significantly better prognosis, and also identified additional patients with a good prognosis within the no pCR group, primarily in the hormone receptor positive, HER-2 negative subgroup. The I-SPY 1 population is enriched for tumors with a poor prognosis but is still heterogeneous in terms of rates of pCR and RFS. The ability of pCR to predict RFS is better by subset than it is for the whole group. Molecular markers improve prediction of RFS by identifying additional patients with excellent prognosis within the no pCR group.
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- 2012
41. The prognostic significance of tumor cell detection in the peripheral blood versus the bone marrow in 733 early-stage breast cancer patients
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Molloy, Timothy J, Bosma, Astrid J, Baumbusch, Lars O, Synnestvedt, Marit, Borgen, Elin, Russnes, Hege, Schlichting, Ellen, van't Veer, Laura J, and Naume, Bjørn
- Abstract
Abstract Introduction The detection of circulating tumour cells (CTCs) in the peripheral blood and disseminated tumour cells (DTCs) in the bone marrow are promising prognostic tools for risk stratification in early breast cancer. There is, however, a need for further validation of these techniques in larger patient cohorts with adequate follow-up periods. Methods We assayed CTCs and DTCs at primary surgery in 733 stage I or II breast cancer patients with a median follow-up time of 7.6 years. CTCs were detected in samples of peripheral blood mononuclear cells previously stored in liquid-nitrogen using a previously-developed multi-marker quantitative PCR (QPCR)-based assay. DTCs were detected in bone marrow samples by immunocytochemical analysis using anti-cytokeratin antibodies. Results CTCs were detected in 7.9% of patients, while DTCs were found in 11.7%. Both CTC and DTC positivity predicted poor metastasis-free survival (MFS) and breast cancer-specific survival (BCSS); MFS hazard ratio (HR) = 2.4 (P < 0.001)/1.9 (P = 0.006), and BCSS HR = 2.5 (P < 0.001)/2.3 (P = 0.01), for CTC/DTC status, respectively). Multivariate analyses demonstrated that CTC status was an independent prognostic variable for both MFS and BCSS. CTC status also identified a subset of patients with significantly poorer outcome among low-risk node negative patients that did not receive adjuvant systemic therapy (MFS HR 2.3 (P = 0.039), BCSS HR 2.9 (P = 0.017)). Using both tests provided increased prognostic information and indicated different relevance within biologically dissimilar breast cancer subtypes. Conclusions These results support the use of CTC analysis in early breast cancer to generate clinically useful prognostic information.
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- 2011
42. A multimarker QPCR-based platform for the detection of circulating tumour cells in patients with early-stage breast cancer
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Molloy, TJ, Devriese, LA, Helgason, HH, Bosma, AJ, Hauptmann, M, Voest, EE, Schellens, JHM, and van't Veer, LJ
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Prevention ,Breast Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Cancer ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Breast Neoplasms ,Female ,Humans ,Immunomagnetic Separation ,Middle Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Neoplastic Cells ,Circulating ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Prognosis ,Prospective Studies ,early-stage breast cancer ,circulating tumour cell ,CTC ,enrichment ,quantitative PCR ,prognosis ,Public Health and Health Services ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
BackgroundThe detection of circulating tumour cells (CTCs) has been linked with poor prognosis in advanced breast cancer. Relatively few studies have been undertaken to study the clinical relevance of CTCs in early-stage breast cancer.MethodsIn a prospective study, we evaluated CTCs in the peripheral blood of 82 early-stage breast cancer patients. Control groups consisted of 16 advanced breast cancer patients and 45 healthy volunteers. The CTC detection was performed using ErbB2/EpCAM immunomagnetic tumour cell enrichment followed by multimarker quantitative PCR (QPCR). The CTC status and common clinicopathological factors were correlated to relapse-free, breast cancer-related and overall survival.ResultsCirculating tumour cells were detected in 16 of 82 (20%) patients with early-stage breast cancer and in 13 out of 16 (81%) with advanced breast cancer. The specificity was 100%. The median follow-up time was 51 months (range: 17-60). The CTC positivity in early-stage breast cancer patients resulted in significantly poorer relapse-free survival (log rank test: P=0.003) and was an independent predictor of relapse-free survival (multivariate hazard ratio=5.13, P=0.006, 95% CI: 1.62-16.31).ConclusionThe detection of CTCs in peripheral blood of early-stage breast cancer patients provided prognostic information for relapse-free survival.
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- 2011
43. Marker genes for circulating tumour cells predict survival in metastasized breast cancer patients
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Weigelt, B, Bosma, AJ, Hart, AAM, Rodenhuis, S, and van't Veer, LJ
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Breast Cancer ,Cancer ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Antigens ,Neoplasm ,Biomarkers ,Tumor ,Breast Neoplasms ,Cell Adhesion Molecules ,Epithelial Cell Adhesion Molecule ,Female ,Humans ,Keratins ,Neoplasm Metastasis ,Neoplastic Cells ,Circulating ,Prognosis ,Proteins ,RNA ,Messenger ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Trefoil Factor-1 ,Tumor Suppressor Proteins ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Public Health and Health Services ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis - Abstract
We investigated the prognostic significance of circulating breast cancer cells in peripheral blood detected by quantitative RT-PCR of marker genes in patients with advanced breast cancer. Blood samples from 94 breast cancer patients with metastatic disease (M1) were examined for circulating tumour cells by studying the mRNA expression of CK19, p1B, PS2 and EGP2 by real-time PCR. Using a score function, developed for predicting circulating tumour cells by quadratic discriminant analysis (QDA), the four expression levels were combined into a single discriminant value. Tumour cells were present in 24 out of 94 (31%) of the patients. In 77% (72 out of 94) of the patients distant metastatic disease was localised in the bone. In 36% (26 out of 72) of the patients with bone metastases at the time of blood sampling, a positive QDA for the four genes was found, in contrast to only 14% (three out of 22) without bone involvement. Overall survival rates by Kaplan-Meier revealed no prognostic effect for the presence of bone metastases (P=0.93). However, patients with a positive QDA value did have a progression-free survival at 1 year of 3% and overall survival at 2 years of 17%, against 22 and 36% for patients with a negative QDA value (P=0.015 and 0.0053, respectively). Breast cancer patients with metastatic disease have a significantly worse progression-free and overall survival when circulating tumour cells can be detected in their peripheral blood.
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- 2003
44. Prediction and clinical utility of a contralateral breast cancer risk model
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Giardiello, Daniele, Steyerberg, Ewout W., Hauptmann, Michael, Adank, Muriel A., Akdeniz, Delal, Blomqvist, Carl, Bojesen, Stig E., Bolla, Manjeet K., Brinkhuis, Mariël, Chang-Claude, Jenny, Czene, Kamila, Devilee, Peter, Dunning, Alison M., Easton, Douglas F., Eccles, Diana M., Fasching, Peter A., Figueroa, Jonine, Flyger, Henrik, García-Closas, Montserrat, Haeberle, Lothar, Haiman, Christopher A., Hall, Per, Hamann, Ute, Hopper, John L., Jager, Agnes, Jakubowska, Anna, Jung, Audrey, Keeman, Renske, Kramer, Iris, Lambrechts, Diether, Le Marchand, Loic, Lindblom, Annika, Lubiński, Jan, Manoochehri, Mehdi, Mariani, Luigi, Nevanlinna, Heli, Oldenburg, Hester S. A., Pelders, Saskia, Pharoah, Paul D. P., Shah, Mitul, Siesling, Sabine, Smit, Vincent T. H. B. M., Southey, Melissa C., Tapper, William J., Tollenaar, Rob A. E. M., van den Broek, Alexandra J., van Deurzen, Carolien H. M., van Leeuwen, Flora E., van Ongeval, Chantal, Van’t Veer, Laura J., Wang, Qin, Wendt, Camilla, Westenend, Pieter J., Hooning, Maartje J., and Schmidt, Marjanka K.
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- 2019
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45. FFQ versus repeated 24-h recalls for estimating diet-related environmental impact
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Mertens, Elly, Kuijsten, Anneleen, Geleijnse, Johanna M., Boshuizen, Hendriek C., Feskens, Edith J. M., and van’t Veer, Pieter
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- 2019
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46. Role of tissue factor in the procoagulant and antibacterial effects of human adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells during pneumosepsis in mice
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Perlee, Desirée, de Vos, Alex F., Scicluna, Brendon P., Maag, Anja, Mancheño, Pablo, de la Rosa, Olga, Dalemans, Wilfried, Florquin, Sandrine, van’t Veer, Cornelis, Lombardo, Eleuterio, and van der Poll, Tom
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- 2019
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47. Bradykinin receptor deficiency or antagonism do not impact the host response during gram-negative pneumonia-derived sepsis
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Ding, Chao, Yang, Jack, van’t Veer, Cornelis, and van der Poll, Tom
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- 2019
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48. Discovery of Five SOS2 Fragment Hits with Binding Modes Determined by SOS2 X‑Ray Cocrystallography.
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Smith, Christopher R., Chen, Dan, Christensen, James G., Coulombe, René, Féthière, James, Gunn, Robin J., Hollander, Johan, Jones, Benjamin, Ketcham, John M., Khare, Shilpi, Kuehler, Jon, Lawson, J. David, Marx, Matthew A., Olson, Peter, Pearson, Kelly E., Ren, Cynthia, Tsagris, Denise, Ulaganathan, Thirumalaiselvi, Van't Veer, Inge, and Wang, Xiaolun
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- 2024
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49. A breast cancer gene signature for indolent disease
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Delahaye, Leonie J. M. J., Drukker, Caroline A., Dreezen, Christa, Witteveen, Anke, Chan, Bob, Snel, Mireille, Beumer, Inès J., Bernards, Rene, Audeh, M. William, van’t Veer, Laura J., and Glas, Annuska M.
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- 2017
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50. User-documented food consumption data from publicly available apps: an analysis of opportunities and challenges for nutrition research
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Maringer, Marcus, van’t Veer, Pieter, Klepacz, Naomi, Verain, Muriel C. D., Normann, Anne, Ekman, Suzanne, Timotijevic, Lada, Raats, Monique M., and Geelen, Anouk
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- 2018
- Full Text
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