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    N Engl J Med. 2002 Nov 14;347(20):1566-75.

    Cyclin E and survival in patients with breast cancer.

    Source

    Department of Experimental Radiation Oncology, University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston 77030-4095, USA. kkeyomar@mdanderson.org

    Erratum in

    • N Engl J Med 2003 Jan 9;348(2):186.

    Abstract

    BACKGROUND:

    Cyclin E, a regulator of the cell cycle, affects the behavior of breast-cancer cells. We investigated whether levels of cyclin E in the tumor correlated with survival among patients with breast cancer.

    METHODS:

    Tumor tissue from 395 patients with breast cancer was assayed for cyclin E, cyclin D1, cyclin D3, and the HER-2/neu oncogene with the use of Western blot analysis. Full-length, low-molecular-weight, and total cyclin E were measured. Immunohistochemical assessments of cyclin E were also made of 256 tumors. We sought correlations between levels of these molecular markers and disease-specific and overall survival.

    RESULTS:

    The median follow-up was 6.4 years. A high level of the low-molecular-weight isoforms of cyclin E, as detected by Western blotting, correlated strongly with disease-specific survival whether axillary lymph nodes were negative or positive for metastases (P<0.001). Among 114 patients with stage I breast cancer, none of the 102 patients with low levels of cyclin E in the tumor had died of breast cancer by five years after diagnosis, whereas all 12 patients with a high level of low-molecular-weight cyclin E had died of breast cancer within that period. In multivariate analysis, a high total cyclin E level or high levels of the low-molecular-weight forms of cyclin E were significantly correlated with poor outcome. The hazard ratio for death from breast cancer for patients with high total cyclin E levels as compared with those with low total cyclin E levels was 13.3--about eight times as high as the hazard ratios associated with other independent clinical and pathological risk factors.

    CONCLUSIONS:

    Levels of total cyclin E and low-molecular-weight cyclin E in tumor tissue, as measured by Western blot assay, correlate strongly with survival in patients with breast cancer.

    Copyright 2002 Massachusetts Medical Society

    PMID:
    12432043
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    Free full text

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