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Breast tumors that overexpress nuclear metastasis-associated 1 (MTA1) proteinhave high recurrence risks but enhanced responses to systemic therapies.

Authors :
Michelle Martin
Susan Hilsenbeck
Syed Mohsin
Torsten Hopp
Gary Clark
C. Osborne
D. Allred
Peter O’Connell
Source :
Breast Cancer Research & Treatment; Jan2006, Vol. 95 Issue 1, p7-12, 6p
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

Nuclear metastasis-associated 1(MTA1) protein is an estrogen receptor co-repressor that regulates transcription via chromatin remodeling, and MTA1 messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) levels are elevated in several kinds of locally advanced and metastatic tumors relative to non-metastatic tumors. Previous studies in our laboratory mapped MTA1 into a region showing significantly lower LOH (loss of heterozygosity) in primary breast cancers with metastases compared to node-negative tumors, suggesting that epigenetic alterations of MTA1 affect metastatic potential. The present study examined immunohistochemical expression of the MTA1 protein in treated and untreated primary human breast cancers to study the relationship between MTA1 expression and clinical outcome. Node-negative tumors that overexpress MTA1 protein had recurrence risks similar to node-positive tumors. In multivariate analysis of untreated node-negative tumors, highest expression of MTA1 was associated with increased relapse risk (hazard ratio (HR)=2.72, p=0.0003 for multivariate analysis). Tamoxifen and/or anthracylcene-based chemotherapies eliminated all MTA1 associations with clinical outcome, suggesting MTA1 overexpression predicts early disease relapse, but sensitizes breast tumors to systemic therapies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01676806
Volume :
95
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Breast Cancer Research & Treatment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
20453715
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10549-005-9016-8