Association of C‐<i>erb</i>B‐2 protein over‐expression with high rate of cell proliferation, increased risk of visceral metastasis and poor long‐term survival in breast cancer

Olli Kallioniemi(Tampere University Hospital), Kaija Holli(Tampere University Hospital), Tapio Visakorpi, Timo Koivula, Heikki Helin(Tampere University Hospital), Jorma Isola(Tampere University)
International Journal of Cancer
November 11, 1991
Cited by 347

Abstract

c-erbB-2 protein over-expression was studied immunohistochemically in 319 paraffin-embedded breast carcinomas representing 89% of all breast-cancer cases operated in the Tampere University Hospital between 1977 and 1981. The immunohistochemical evaluation of c-erbB-2 was optimized using protease pre-treatment and verified using antibodies for both the external and the internal domains of the protein. c-erbB-2 over-expression was found in 72 (23%) of the 319 cases and was associated with high histological and nuclear grade (p less than 0.0001), DNA aneuploidy (p = 0.003), high tumor S-phase fraction (p less than 0.0001), and lack of estrogen (p less than 0.0001) and progesterone (p = 0.03) receptors. Overall, breast-cancer patients with c-erbB-2 over-expression had about 2.2-fold relative risk (RR) of death (p less than 0.001) as compared with those without over-expression. According to a multivariate analysis, c-erbB-2 over-expression was an independent prognostic factor in the whole material as well as in the node-negative sub-set. In node-negative breast-cancer tumor size, S-phase and c-erbB-2 status defined a large patient group with only 4% 5-year and 15% 10-year mortality rate without adjuvant therapy. In comparison with c-erbB-2-negative tumors, those with over-expression of this gene metastasized 3 times more often (p = 0.0002) to the lungs, liver and brain and 3 times less often to the bone. Our findings suggest that the prognostic value of c-erbB-2 over-expression may be related not only to increased cell proliferation rate but also to a distinctive pattern of metastasis.


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