کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
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6190319 | 1601082 | 2016 | 5 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

BackgroundBreast cancer expressing all three diagnostic markers (estrogen receptor, ER+; progesterone receptor, PgR+; human epidermal growth factor receptor 2, HER2+) is insufficiently characterized even though it is a sizable patient population. An invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC) triple-positive breast cancer (TPBC) case is genomically profiled and the literature reviewed to illustrate the molecular heterogeneity and interconnectivity of the disease biology.Presentation of caseA premenopausal, 48-year-old female with no family history of breast cancer presented with IDC (1.5Â cm primary tumor, 5 nodal metastases of 23 axillary nodes examined, pT1cN2a AJCC/UICC stage). Immunohistochemical analysis showed strong staining of all three diagnostic markers (ER 4+, PgR 4+, HER2 3+). HER2 amplification was confirmed by FISH (HER2/cen17 ratio=5.7). Ki-67 nuclear staining was detected in 30% of tumor cells.Genomic findingsERRB2 was amplified (9 copies) and activated by mutation (S310F). The PI3K pathway was activated through a catalytic subunit activating mutation (PIK3CA-E545K), a regulatory subunit amplification (PIK3R2, 8 copies) and an AKT1 activating mutation (E17K). Additional alterations were identified (IGF1R, SMO, DOT1L, ERG, CEBPA). BRCA1/2 germline abnormalities were not identified. Surgery followed by adjuvant therapy APHINITY trial (Taxotere, carboplatin, Herceptin, 50% chance of pertuzumab) and anti-estrogen therapy. These therapies either directly (ER, HER2) or indirectly (PI3K) target the patient-specific tumor biology. The patient is free of disease 40 months post-surgery.ConclusionGenomic profiling detected multiple alterations impinging on the PI3K signaling pathway and gene regulation suggesting important contributions of these processes to this TPBC, despite two dominant pathway engagements (ER, HER2).
Journal: Cancer Treatment and Research Communications - Volume 9, 2016, Pages 27-31