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    Breast Cancer Res. 2009;11(4):R54. Epub 2009 Jul 28.

    Tumor aromatase expression as a prognostic factor for local control in young breast cancer patients after breast-conserving treatment.

    Bollet MA, Savignoni A, De Koning L, Tran-Perennou C, Barbaroux C, Degeorges A, Sigal-Zafrani B, Almouzni G, Cottu P, Salmon R, Servant N, Fourquet A, de Cremoux P.

    Department of Radiation Oncology, Institut Curie, 26 rue d'Ulm, 75248 Paris, France. marc.bollet@curie.net

    Abstract

    INTRODUCTION : We sought to determine whether the levels of expression of 17 candidate genes were associated with locoregional control after breast-conserving treatments of early-stage breast cancers in young, premenopausal women. METHODS : Gene expression was measured by using RT-PCR in the breast tumors of a series of 53 young (younger than 40 years), premenopausal patients. All treatments consisted of primary breast-conserving surgery followed by whole-breast radiotherapy (+/- regional lymph nodes) with or without systemic treatments (chemotherapy +/- hormone therapy). The median follow-up was 10 years. RESULTS : The 10-year locoregional control rate was 70% (95% CI, 57% to 87%). In univariate analysis, no clinical/pathologic prognostic factors were found to be significantly associated with decreased locoregional control. Expression of three genes was found to be significantly associated with an increased locoregional recurrence rate: low estrogen-receptor beta, low aromatase, and high GATA3. Two others were associated with only a trend (P < 0.10): low HER1 and SKP2. In multivariate analysis, only the absence of aromatase was significantly associated with an increased locoregional recurrence rate (P = 0.003; relative risk = 0.49; 95% CI 0.29 to 0.82). CONCLUSIONS : Recent data give credit to the fact that breast cancer in young women is a distinct biologic entity driven by special oncogenic pathways. Our results highlight the role of estrogen-signaling pathways (mainly CYP19/aromatase, GATA3, and ER-beta) in the risk of locoregional recurrence of breast cancer in young women. Confirmation in larger prospective studies is needed.

    PMID: 19638208 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]PMCID: PMC2750115Free PMC Article

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