Labelling Requirements and Label Claims for Dietary Supplements and Recommend...
Molecular profiling in breast cancer
1. By : Dr Shashidhara T S
Moderator : Dr Siddiq M Ahmed
2. INTRODUCTION
Most common non-skin malignancy in women.
Incidence is rare in women younger than 25yrs.
Increases rapidly after 30yrs.
3.
4. The majority are estrogen receptor (ER) positive and
are characterized by a gene signature dominated by
the dozens of genes under the control of estrogen.
ER positive cancers continue to increase with age.
ER negative and HER2 positive cancers remains
relatively constant
5.
6. RISK FACTORS
AGE: In young women, half of the cancers are either
ER negative or human epidermal growth factor
receptor 2 (HER2/neu) positive
ER positive cancers peak is seen between 70-80yrs
7. AGE AT FIRST LIVE BIRTH: High risk in nulliparous
women or women over the age of 35 at their first birth.
It is hypothesized that pregnancy results in terminal
differentiation of milk-producing luminal cells,
removing them from the potential pool of cancer
precursors.
8. FIRST DEGREE RELATIVES: 15-20% of women with
breast cancer have one affected first-degree relative.
ESTROGEN EXPOSURE: Postmenopausal hormone
replacement therapy increases the risk.
Most cancers are ER-positive carcinomas.
9. OBESITY: There is decreased risk in obese women
younger than 40 years as a result of the association
with anovulatory cycles.
In contrast, the risk is increased for postmenopausal
obese women, which is attributed to the synthesis of
estrogens in fat depots.
10.
11.
12. ETIOLOGY AND PATHOGENESIS
Breast cancers are clonal proliferations that arise from
cells with multiple genetic aberrations, acquisition of
which is influenced by hormonal exposures and
inherited susceptibility genes.
They can therefore be divided into sporadic cases,
probably related to hormonal exposure, and hereditary
cases, associated with germline mutations.
13.
14.
15.
16. FAMILIAL BREAST CANCER
The inheritance of a susceptibility gene or genes is the
primary cause of approximately 12% of breast cancers.
Multiple affected first-degree relatives,
Before menopause and/or have multiple cancers,
Family members with other specific cancers
17.
18. The major known susceptibility genes for familial
breast cancer are BRCA1, BRCA2, TP53 and CHEK2.
Which are tumor suppressor genes, have normal roles
in DNA repair and maintenance of genomic integrity.
19. Mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2 are responsible for 80-
90% of “single gene” familial breast cancers and about
3% of all breast cancers.
BRCA1 cancers are also frequently associated with loss
of the inactive X chromosome and reduplication of the
active X, resulting in the absence of the Barr body.
BRCA1-associated breast cancers are commonly poorly
differentiated and have medullary like features. ER-
negative/ HER-2 negative, basal like.
20. BRCA2-associated breast carcinomas also tend to be
relatively poorly differentiated, but are more often ER
positive than BRCA1 cancers.
Other known susceptibility genes are much less
commonly implicated; together, this group accounts for
fewer than 10% of hereditary breast carcinomas
21. Rarely patients can have germline TP53 mutations (Li-
Fraumeni syndrome) and develop cancer which are
both HER2 and ER positive.
They will have complex interchromosomal
translocations, high level amplifications of HER2 and a
high mutational load.
22. Li-Fraumeni syndrome and Li-Fraumeni variant
syndrome (due to germline mutations in CHEK2)
together account for about 8% of breast cancers caused
by single genes.
Three other tumor suppressor genes, PTEN (Cowden
syndrome), LKBI/STK11 (Peutz-Jeghers syndrome), and
ATM (ataxia telangiectasia), are mutated in less than
1% of all breast cancers.
23. Except for p53, mutations in genes implicated in
hereditary breast cancer are uncommon in
sporadic breast cancers.
However, decreased expression of BRCA1 and
CHEK2 is common in sporadic cancers,
particularly those that are triple-negative or poorly
differentiated, and basal-like cancers.
24. SPORADIC BREAST CANCER
The major risk factors for sporadic breast cancer are
related to hormone exposure.
The majority of sporadic cancers occur in
postmenopausal women and are ER positive.
Hormonal exposure increases the number of potential
target cells by stimulating breast growth during
puberty, menstrual cycles, and pregnancy.
25. Once premalignant or malignant cells are present,
hormones can stimulate their growth, as well as the
growth of normal epithelial and stromal cells.
Estrogen may also play a more direct role in
carcinogenesis.
Metabolites of estrogen can cause mutations or
generate DNA-damaging free radicals in cell.
26. CARCINOGENESIS
Populations of cells that harbor some, but not all, of
the genetic and epigenetic changes that are required
for carcinogenesis give rise to morphologically
recognizable breast lesions that are associated with an
increased risk of progression to cancer.
The earliest such alterations are proliferative changes,
which may stem from the loss of growth-inhibiting
signals, aberrant increases in pro-growth signals, or
decreased apoptosis.
27. For example, most early lesions (such as atypical ductal
hyperplasia and atypical lobular hyperplasia) show
increased expression of hormone receptors and abnormal
regulation of proliferation.
The most likely cell type of origin for the majority of
carcinomas is the ER-expressing luminal cell, since the
majority of cancers are ER-positive.
ER-negative carcinomas may arise from ER-negative
myoepithelial cells
28. Most common driver mutations involve the proto-
oncogenes PIK3CA, HER2,MYC and CCND1 and the
tumor suppressor genes TP53, BRCA1 and BRCA2.
Once the process is initiated in such cells by a driver
mutation, there can be 3 major genetic pathways of
carcinogenesis
29.
30. Once a founding tumor clone is established, subclonal
heterogeneity arising by chance due to genomic
instability contributes to tumor progression and
resistance to therapy.
Neoplastic epithelial cells are dependent on
interactions with stromal cells in the
microenvironment.
31. Focal alterations in the stroma may play a direct role
by creating a microenvironment conducive to tumor
development and growth.
Loss of heterozygosity is rarely detected in typical
proliferative change but becomes more frequent in
atypical hyperplasias and is almost universally present
in carcinoma in situ.
32. Profound DNA instability in the form of aneuploidy,
which manifests morphologically by nuclear
enlargement, irregularity, and hyperchromasia, is
observed only in high-grade DCIS and some invasive
carcinomas.
At some point during tumor progression the
malignant clone also becomes immortalized and
acquires the ability to drive neo-angiogenesis.
33. The final step of carcinogenesis, the transition of
carcinoma in situ to invasive carcinoma, is the most
important and unfortunately the least understood.
Genetic markers specific for invasive carcinomas have been
difficult to identify.
It is important to remember that the structure and
function of the normal breast depend on a complex
interplay between luminal cells, myoepithelial cells, and
stromal cells.
34. The same molecular events that allow for the normal
formation of new ductal branch points and lobules
during puberty and pregnancy - increased
proliferation, escape from growth inhibition,
angiogenesis may be recapitulated during
carcinogenesis.
Remodeling of the breast, which involves
inflammatory and wound healing like tissue
reactions, could explain the transient increase in
breast cancers during and shortly after pregnancy,
since such changes could facilitate the transition of
carcinoma in situ to invasive cancer
35. CLASSIFICATION
Greater than 95% of breast malignancies are
adenocarcinomas, which are divided into in situ
carcinomas and invasive carcinomas.
Carcinoma in situ refers to a neoplastic proliferation
that is limited to ducts and lobules by the basement
membrane.
Invasive carcinoma (synonymous with infiltrating
carcinoma) has penetrated through the basement
membrane into stroma.
36. All breast carcinomas arise from cells in the terminal
duct lobular unit
The use of the terms lobular and ductal to describe
both in situ and invasive carcinomas persists
37. Carcinoma in situ was originally classified as ductal or
lobular based on the resemblance of the involved
spaces to normal ducts or lobules.
However, it is now recognized that varied patterns of
growth in situ are not related to the site or cell of
origin, but rather reflect differences in tumor cell
biology, such as whether the tumor cells express the
cell adhesion protein E-cadherin or not
38. By current convention, lobular refers to
carcinomas of a specific type, and ductal is used
more generally for adenocarcinomas that have no
other designation.
39. CARCINOMA IN SITU
DUCTAL CARCINOMA IN SITU: DCIS consists of a
malignant clonal population of cells limited to ducts and
lobules by the basement membrane.
The myoepithelial cells are preserved, although they may
be diminished in number.
DCIS has been divided into five architectural subtypes:
comedocarcinoma, solid, cribriform, papillary, and
micropapillary…..majority of DCIS show a mixture of
patterns.
40.
41.
42.
43. PAGETS DISESE: Malignant cells (Paget cells) extend
from DCIS within the ductal system, via the lactiferous
sinuses, into nipple skin without crossing the
basement membrane
The tumor cells disrupt the normal epithelial barrier,
allowing extracellular fluid to seep out onto the nipple
surface.
44.
45. Almost all of these cases have an underlying invasive
carcinoma.
The carcinomas are usually poorly differentiated, ER
negative, and over-express HER2/neu.
Prognosis depends upon the underlying carcinoma.
46. DCIS with microinvasion is diagnosed when there is
an area of invasion through the basement membrane
into stroma measuring no more than 0.1 cm.
Microinvasion is most commonly seen in association
with comedocarcinoma.
47. LOBULAR CARCINOMA IN SITU (LCIS): common
in young women, with 80% to 90% of cases occurring
before menopause.
The cells of LCIS and invasive lobular carcinoma are
identical and share genetic abnormalities, such as
those that lead to loss of expression of E-
cadherin(CDH1gene) , a transmembrane cell adhesion
protein that contributes to the cohesion of normal
breast epithelial cells.
LCIS almost always expresses ER and PR.
Oerexpression of HER2/neu is not observed
48.
49. INVASIVE CARCINOMA
Luminal A: (40% to 55% of NST cancers):
This is the largest group and consists of cancers that
are ER positive and HER2 negative.
The gene signature is dominated by the dozens of
genes under the control of ER
50. The majority are well or moderately differentiated, and
most occur in postmenopausal women.
These cancers are generally slow growing and respond
well to hormonal treatments.
51. Luminal B (10% of NST cancers):
This group of cancers also expresses ER but is generally
of higher grade, has a higher proliferative rate and/or
HER2 expression and low or absent PR expression.
Most commonly associated with BRCA2 germline
mutations.
10% of cases may respond to chemotherapy.
52. HER2 positive (20% of NST cancers): Common in
young women
90% of HER2/neu positive cancers, overexpression is
due to amplification of the segment of DNA on 17q21
that includes the HER2/neu gene.
In rare cases, HER2/neu protein over-expression may
occur as a result of mechanisms other than gene
amplification.
53. Identification is through assays of HER2 protein
overexpression or HER2 gene amplification.
These cancers are usually poorly differentiated, have a
high proliferation rate, and are associated with a high
frequency of brain metastasis.
One third or more respond to antibodies that bind
block HER2 activity.
54. Basal-like (15% of NST cancers): Common in young
premenopausal women.
Many carcinomas arising in women with BRCA1
mutations are of this type.
10% of basal basal like cancers express ER and about
15% express HER2
55. Thus, assays for protein expression or gene
amplification must be done for targeted therapy.
Members of this group include medullary carcinomas,
metaplastic carcinomas, secretory carcinomas,
adenoid cystic carcinoma.
30% respond to chemotherapy.
56.
57.
58.
59. The cancer genome atlas network reported different
genetic abnormalities associated with molecular
intrinsic subtypes.
40% of luminal A tumors had mutated PIK3CA gene.
29% of luminal B tumors showed PIK3CA and TP53
mutation.
60. TP53 was mutated in 80% of the basal like classes
which exhibited the highest amount of mutations
compared to luminal tumors.
HER2 enriched tumors showed HER2 amplification in
80% of cases.
61. SPECIAL HISTOLOGIC TYPES
They harbor a unique genetic
aberrations, distinct gene signatures that
break the “rules” that have been
established for breast cancers of no special
type.
62. INVASIVE LOBULAR CARCINOMA
In lobular carcinoma, biallelic loss of expression of
CDH1, the gene that encodes E-cadherin, stems from a
combination of deletions, mutations, and promoter
silencing via methylation.
Loss of E-cadherin is also seen in atypical lobular
hyperplasia and LCIS, indicating that this alteration is
a relatively early event in the development of lobular
carcinoma
63.
64. MEDULLARY CARCINOMA
Have features that are characteristic of BRCA1
associated carcinomas (13%).
Hypermethyation of the BRCA1 promoter leading to
downregulation of BRCA1 expression is seen in 67%.
All medullary carcinomas are poorly differentiated
65.
66.
67.
68.
69.
70. METAPLASTIC CARCINOMA
Metaplastic carcinoma includes a variety of rare types
of breast cancer (<1% of all cases), such as matrix-
producing carcinomas, squamous cell carcinomas, and
carcinomas with a prominent spindle cell component.
They are ER-PR-HER2/neu triple negative, often
express myoepithelial proteins, and appear to be
related to the basal-like carcinomas.
The prognosis is generally poor
71. MALE BREAST CANCER
Overall incidence in men is only 1% of that in women,
which translates to a lifetime risk of 0.11%.
Risk factors are similar to those in women and include
first-degree relatives with breast cancer, decreased
testicular function (e.g., Klinefelter syndrome),
exposure to exogenous estrogens, increasing age,
infertility, obesity.
72. From 4% to 14% of cases in males are attributed to
germline BRCA2 mutations.
There is a 60% to 76% chance of a BRCA2 mutation in
families with at least one affected male
73. The same histologic subtypes of invasive cancer are
present, although papillary carcinomas (both invasive
and in situ) are more common and lobular carcinomas
are less common.
The expression of molecular markers is similar, with
the exception that ER positivity is more common in
male breast cancer (81% of tumors).
74. PHYLLODES TUMOR
Associated with clonal acquired chromosomal changes
with gains in chromosome 1q being the most frequent.
Overexpression of homebox trancription factor
HOXB13 is associated with higher tumor grade and
aggressive clinical behaviour.
75. MOLECULAR PROFILING
Breast cancer is caused by heterogenous group of
tumors, and that tumor behaviour and response to
therapy is determined by underlying biological
features.
Current morphological surrogates based on
anatomical and histological properties of the tumor do
not reflect biological and molecular heterogeneity, nor
do they fully explain the genetic abnormalities found
in tumors.
76. First molecular classification systems employed a
limited number of biomarkers.
Using unsupervised clustering techniques breast
cancer was grouped into clusters of intrinsic subtypes
based on the quantitative expression of several genes.
These molecular subtypes were associated with
outcome of therapy.
77. Why?
Genome-wide microarray-based gene expression
profiling (GEP) studies have shown the ER and HER2
alone were unable to explain the heterogeneity of
breast cancer.
Luminal ER positive cases comprises 70% of breast
cancers shows a heterogenous clinical outcome and a
variable response to systemic therapy.
78. Heterogeneity?
In ER positive breast cancers hormone therapy reduces
10 year recurrence rate by 50% and reduces 15 year
mortality by a third.
However a proportion of these cases did not respond,
indicating that other genes and pathways are involved
in determining the response and behavior of these
tumors.
79. Introduction of molecular multigene assays that aim to
classify subgroups of breast cancer based on the
outcome and response to therapy.
Various molecular subgroups of breast cancer can be
categorised by the aggregation of genes rather than
individual genes.
80. How to do?
Approach involves identification of a set of
genes(gene signature) that can be used collectively
identify tumors with specific biological or clinical
features.
Gene signature: expression of a set of genes in a
biological sample using microarray technology.
81. Advantages: Association between molecular intrinsic
subtype classification and outcome and response to
therapy.
Disadvantage: cost, access to technology and need for
fresh tumor material.
Recently molecular intrinsic subtyping that uses
formaline fixed paraffin embedded material has
become available.
82. In addition to prognosis and prediction use
microarray-based gene expression tests have been
developed to identify the cancer tissue of origin.
Next generation sequencing (NGS) or massively
parallel sequencing (MPS) help in decoding breast
cancer molecular complexity , refining molecular
classification and identifying new therapeutic targets.
83. Molecular classification using
intrinsic subtypes
In 2000, Perou et al described for the first time a
molecular classification system for breast carcinoma,
identifying 4 major molecular subtypes: ER-positive/
luminal-like, basal-like, ERRB2-positive (HER2-
enriched), and normal breast-like.
Subsequent studies redefined the intrinsic molecular
classification, resulting in a subdivision of the luminal
type into types A and B
84. The normal breast-like subtype has not been
reproducibly defined and is thought to be an artifact of
having too few tumor cells and a background of
normal breast tissue in the sample.
Although this classification gained acceptance, the
initial testing methodology used messenger
ribonucleic acid (mRNA) expression analysis in fresh
frozen tissue, thus hampering its introduction into
clinical practice.
85.
86. Molecular taxonomy of breast cancer international
consortium (METABRIC) study of 2000 breast cancers
reported that the number of molecular subtypes is
likely 10, which are called ‘integrative clusters’.
This also confirmed that triple negative tumors are
characterised by complex patterns of copy number
gains and losses throughout the genome.
87. To overcome the problems of fresh tissue, the
availability of microarray-based technology and assay
reproducibility, other techniques such as RT-PCR and
IHC coupled with microarrays have been introduced.
First approach involves the identification of minimum
gene set from microarray based studies which is then
used to identify the GEP defined classes.
88. One successful example is PAM50 (prediction of
microarray using 50 classifier genes plus 5 reference genes)
classifier introduced in 2009 by Parker et al.
It categorises breast cancer into 4 intrinsic subtypes:
luminal A, luminal B, HER2 enriched and basal like.
In addition to classifying subtypes of breast cancer, the
test yields a risk of recurrence score, taking into
consideration the pathological tumor size and a subset of
quantitative values for proliferation, luminal gene
expression, ESR1 (ER), PGR (PR), and ERBB2.
89. The PAM50 breast cancer intrinsic classifier test is
recommended for patients diagnosed with invasive
breast cancer, regardless of their stage or ER status.
PAM50 has been shown in multivariate analyses to be
an independent predictor of survival rate in breast
cancer, as well as independent and superior to ER
status, tumor grade, lymph node status, and other
variables.
90. However, PAM50 does not entirely correlate with IHC
results because the test may classify some tumors that
are HER2-positive by standard techniques, such as
IHC or in situ hybridization, as luminal types A or B.
Conversely, up to 30% of HER2-enriched tumors by
PAM50 are clinically negative for HER2
91. Microarrays with IHC
Second approach uses microassays and IHC, utilising a
large panel of biologically relevant biomarkers(10)
identifed 7 molecular classes.
Simpler approach used the three routinely available
markers (ER,PR and HER2) plus Ki67 to classify breast
cancer into four molecular subclasses.
92. Blows et al reported 6 intrinsic subtypes using 5 IHC
markers (ER,PR,HER2, EGFR and CK5/6).
Recently published European Society for Medical
Oncology (ESMO) clinical practice guidelines
classifies breast cancer into 5 molecular subtypes
based on 4 markers (ER, PR, HER2 and Ki67) with or
without the addition of molecular gene signatures.
93. 1. Luminal A tumors are defined as ER and PR positive,
HER2 negative, Ki67 low (10%) and low risk
molecular signature*
2. Luminal B :subclassified into
HER2 positive and HER2 neagtive with
Either high proliferative activity (Ki67>30%),PR low or
showing poor prognostic molecular signature*
94. 3. Basal like is defined as triple neagtive.
4. HER2 positive is defined as HER2
overexpression/gene amplification with absence of
ER and PR.
95. Multigene prognostic and
predictive signatures
In addition to intrinsic subtype classification,
microarray based GEP has been expanded to identify
relevant classes (class prediction) using supervised
clustering techniques.
This class prediction approach was pioneered by Veer
et al.
96. Despite the effort invested in developing prognostic
gene signatures, most signatures are reduced to two or
three risk categories (low, intermediate and high)
Current guidelines advise oncologists to withhold
chemotherapy in patients with low recurrence scores
but to offer treatment to those with high recurrence
scores.
97. Patients with an intermediate recurrence score
constitute a “gray zone.” To further clarify the risk of
recurrence and benefit from chemotherapy in such
patients, the Trial Assigning Individualized Options
for Treatment (TAILORx trial) was initiated and is
ongoing.
98. TEST NAME COMPONE
NT GENES
INTENDED
CLINICAL UTILITY
TECHNOLO
GY
CLASSIFICATI
ON
MammaPrint
/Amsterdam
signature
70 genes
(First
prognostic
gene
signature to
be
identified)
Node negative ER+ve or
ER-ve.
Estimates risk
recurrence.
Fresh or FFPE,
microarray
2 categories:
Low risk and
high risk
Oncotype DX
(recurrence
score0-100)
21 genes (16
cancer
related and
5 contros)
ER+ve, HER2-ve, node
negative breast cancer.
Predicts the likelihood
of chemotherapy
benefit as well as
recurrence in hormone
therapy treated
patients.
FFPE, RT-PCR 3 categories
Low risk
(RS<18)
Intermediate
risk
(RS18-300)
High risk
(RS>31)
99. Molecuar
grade index
(MGI)
5 genes ER+ve node negative
patients treated with
hormonal therapy
FFPE, RT-
PCR
2categories:
low and high
risk of
recurrence
Two gene
expression
ratio (H/I)
Ratio of the
relative
mRNA
expression of
2 genes
(HOXB13:IL1
7BR)
ER+ve, node neagtive
patients
FFPE, RT-
PCR
2 categories:
Low and high
risk
THEROS
Breast
cancer index
(BCI)
A
combination
of MGI and
the 2 gene
ratio
Risk of distant
recurrence in ER+ve
node negative breast
cancer.
Risk of late distant
metastasis and benefit
from extended (>5yrs)
hormone therapy
FFPE, RTR-
PCR
100. MammaPrint score
MammaPrint is a microarray, in vitro, 70-gene
expression profile that includes genes considered to be
the hallmarks of local invasion, cancer-related biology,
regulators of cell cycle, proliferation, metastasis,
extravasation, survival in circulation, angiogenesis,
and adaptation to the microenvironment.
Its prognostic use is approved for women under the
age of 61 who have ER-positive or ER-negative, lymph
node-negative breast cancer, and whose tumors are
smaller than 5 cm in size.
101. Those considered to be low risk per the results of the test
should be advised to avoid adjuvant chemotherapy and
instead receive endocrine therapy alone, whereas those at
high risk are generally advised to receive chemotherapy.
The test is highly accurate for patients at low risk because
the likelihood of progression to metastatic disease in these
cases is low.
However, for patients at high risk, the prediction of
metastatic progression is not as precise because only
approximately 25% of these patients will progress at 5 years
102. Oncotype DX assay
RT-PCR based assay performed on FFPE breast cancer
samples.
Predicts the likelihood of distant recurrence or breast
cancer death in ER positive patients treated with
hormonal therapy alone.
Also predicts the likelihood of chemotherapy benefit
in patients with high recurrence score.
103. Oncotype DX is included in treatment guidelines from
the American Society of Clinical Oncology and
National Comprehensive Cancer Network.
However the assay does have limitations. For example,
it is validated in hormone receptor–positive breast
cancer alone.
It also has a high false-negative rate for HER2 that
could lead to the underestimation of recurrence risk
because such results influence the recurrence score.
104. BREAST CANCER INDEX
Consists of two independently developed gene
signatures.
Molecular grade index (MGI), a five gene predictor
that recapitulates tumor grade/proliferation, and the
tow gene ratio (HOXB13/IL17BR) signature (H/I).
It is a predictor of early distance recurrence and is the
only significant prognostic for risk of late recurrence.
105. The BCI Prognostic score estimates how likely the
cancer is to come back 5 to 10 years after diagnosis
(late recurrence).
Scores range from 0 to 10. Cancers with scores of 0 to 5
are classified as having low risk of late recurrence.
Cancers with scores of 5 to 10 are classified as having a
high risk of late recurrence.
106. NEXT GENERATION SEQUENCING
Uses include whole genome sequencing, whole exome
sequencing, targeted exome sequencing (target
enrichment methods to capture the gene of interest)
and hotspot sequencing (sequences selected
regions/regions with recurrent mutations of selected
genes of interest)
107. Characterise genome alterations such as copy number
changes, mutations/deletions.
To enable the identification of subclonal mutations.
To facilitate sequencing at a greater depth (at the base
pair level).
108. In a NGS study of 100 breast cancers the number of
somatic mutations was reported to vary markedly
between individual tumors and to correlate the patient
age and histological grade.
Driver mutations were identified in at least 40 cancer
genes.
109. Seven of those 40 cancer genes (TP53, PIK3CA, MYC,
ERBB2, CCND1 and GATA3) were mutated in >10% of
cases.
These contributed 58% of driver mutations.
There was a maximum of 6 mutated cancer genes in an
individual breast cancer.
110. NGS has also been used to demonstrate the spatial and
temporal intratumor heterogeneity of breast cancer.
It showed that the constellations of somatic mutations
found between a primary breast cancer and its
metastases (temporal heterogeniety) and between
the distinct areas within the primary tumor (spatial
heterogeneity) are not identical.
Providing further evidence to indicate the breast
cancer evolve over the course of the disease.
111.
112. A recurrent problem in breast cancer therapeutics
which NGS promises to untangle is endocrine
resistance.
Approximately 30% of ER-positive breast cancers
exhibit de novo resistance, and acquire resistance to
these therapies.
113. CONCLUSION
Molecular testing is becoming increasingly important
in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of breast
cancer.
Despite the enormous amount of work that has been
carried out to develop and refine breast cancer
molecular classification, it is still evolving.
114. References
Klatt, Edward C, and Vinay Kumar. Robbins And
Cotran Review Of Pathology. 1st ed. London: Elsevier
Health Sciences, 2009.
Recent advances in pathology 24.
Kittaneh et al. Molecular Profiling for Breast Cancer: A
Comprehensive Review. Biomarkers in Cancer 2013:5
61–70 doi:10.
Marilin Rosa et al, Advances in the Molecular Analysis
of Breast Cancer: Pathway Toward Personalized
Medicine. 4137/BIC.S9455.