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DNA methylation profiling identifies two distinct subgroups in breast cancers with low hormone receptor expression, mainly associated with HER2 amplification status.

Authors :
Jurmeister P
Weber K
Villegas S
Karn T
Untch M
Thieme A
Müller V
Taube E
Fasching P
Schmitt WD
Marmé F
Stickeler E
Sinn BV
Jank P
Schem C
Klauschen F
van Mackelenbergh M
Denkert C
Loibl S
Capper D
Source :
Clinical epigenetics [Clin Epigenetics] 2021 Oct 03; Vol. 13 (1), pp. 184. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Oct 03.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background: Current clinical guidelines suggest that breast cancers with low hormone receptor expression (LowHR) in 1-10% of tumor cells should be regarded as hormone receptor positive. However, clinical data show that these patients have worse outcome compared to patients with hormone receptor expression above 10%. We performed DNA methylation profiling on 23 LowHR breast cancer specimens, including 13 samples with HER2 amplification and compared our results with a reference breast cancer cohort from The Cancer Genome Atlas to clarify the status for this infrequent but important patient subgroup.<br />Results: In unsupervised clustering and dimensionality reduction, breast cancers with low hormone receptor expression that lacked HER2 amplification usually clustered with triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) reference samples (8/10; "LowHR TNBC-like"). In contrast, most specimens with low hormone receptor expression and HER2 amplification grouped with hormone receptor positive cancers (11/13; "LowHR HRpos-like"). We observed highly similar DNA methylation patterns of LowHR TNBC-like samples and true TNBCs. Furthermore, the Ki67 proliferation index of LowHR TNBC-like samples and clinical outcome parameters were more similar to TNBCs and differed from LowHR HRpos-like cases.<br />Conclusions: We here demonstrate that LowHR breast cancer comprises two epigenetically distinct groups. Our data strongly suggest that LowHR TNBC-like samples are molecularly, histologically and clinically closely related to TNBC, while LowHR HRpos-like specimens are closely related to hormone receptor positive tumors.<br /> (© 2021. The Author(s).)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1868-7083
Volume :
13
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Clinical epigenetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34602069
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13148-021-01176-5