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Gene-expression molecular subtyping of triple-negative breast cancer tumours: importance of immune response.

Authors :
Jézéquel, Pascal
Loussouarn, Delphine
Guérin-Charbonnel, Catherine
Campion, Loïc
Vanier, Antoine
Gouraud, Wilfried
Lasla, Hamza
Guette, Catherine
Valo, Isabelle
Verrièle, Véronique
Campone, Mario
Source :
Breast Cancer Research; 2015, Vol. 17 Issue 1, p1-16, 16p, 2 Color Photographs, 2 Diagrams, 3 Charts, 1 Graph
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Introduction: Triple-negative breast cancers need to be refined in order to identify therapeutic subgroups of patients Methods: We conducted an unsupervised analysis of microarray gene-expression profiles of 107 triple-negative breast cancer patients and undertook robust functional annotation of the molecular entities found by means of numerous approaches including immunohistochemistry and gene-expression signatures. A triple-negative external cohort (n = 87) was used for validation. Results: Fuzzy clustering separated triple-negative tumours into three clusters: C1 (22.4%), C2 (44.9%) and C3 (32.7%). C1 patients were older (mean = 64.6 years) than C2 (mean = 56.8 years; P = 0.03) and C3 patients (mean = 51.9 years; P = 0.0004). Histological grade and Nottingham prognostic index were higher in C2 and C3 than in C1 (P < 0.0001 for both comparisons). Significant event-free survival (P = 0.03) was found according to cluster membership: patients belonging to C3 had a better outcome than patients in C1 (P = 0.01) and C2 (P = 0.02). Event-free survival analysis results were confirmed when our cohort was pooled with the external cohort (n = 194; P = 0.01). Functional annotation showed that 22% of triple-negative patients were not basal-like (C1). C1 was enriched in luminal subtypes and positive androgen receptor (luminal androgen receptor). C2 could be considered as an almost pure basal-like cluster. C3, enriched in basal-like subtypes but to a lesser extent, included 26% of claudin-low subtypes. Dissection of immune response showed that high immune response and low M2-like macrophages were a hallmark of C3, and that these patients had a better event-free survival than C2 patients, characterized by low immune response and high M2-like macrophages: P = 0.02 for our cohort, and P = 0.03 for pooled cohorts. Conclusions: We identified three subtypes of triple-negative patients: luminal androgen receptor (22%), basal-like with low immune response and high M2-like macrophages (45%), and basal-enriched with high immune response and low M2-like macrophages (33%). We noted out that macrophages and other immune effectors offer a variety of therapeutic targets in breast cancer, and particularly in triple-negative basal-like tumours. Furthermore, we showed that CK5 antibody was better suited than CK5/6 antibody to subtype triple-negative patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14655411
Volume :
17
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Breast Cancer Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
102617512
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13058-015-0550-y