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High-risk breast cancer: From biology to personalized therapeutic strategies

Abstract
Adjuvant treatment regimens for breast cancer are primarily based on patient- and tumor-related factors, e.g. patient menopausal status, tumor stage and histological grade, and the status of molecular tumor markers (HER2/neu and the estrogen receptor). Despite improvements in survival rates, about 20% of patients experience recurrence within five years of initial therapy. There is therefore a need to improve patient risk assessment and to personalize therapy according to a combination of patient-specific clinicopathological features and tumor characteristics. This doctoral thesis is a multidisciplinary effort between molecular biologists, clinicians, and pathologists to identify potential therapeutic targets for high-risk breast carcinoma. This work exploits common knowledge that the accumulation of deleterious genetic and epigenetic modulators contribute to breast cancer risk for recurrence and death by deregulating key cellular processes within a specific tumor. In the first work, we found that tumors from high-risk breast cancer patients were genetically instable, containing a 2-fold increase in genetic alterations, an overrepresentation of alterations on chromosomes 3, 18, and 20, and the recurrent deregulation of a 13-marker transcriptome signature associated with significantly shorter disease-specific survival rates (AZGP1, CBX2, DNALI1, LOC389033, NME5, PIP, S100A8, SCUBE2, SERPINA11, STC2, STK32B, SUSD3, and UBE2C). Second, subsequent validation of the 13-marker signature demonstrated the importance of not only performing external validation in independent breast cancer microarray datasets, but also to assess the biological and clinical relevance of individual markers at the protein level because of frequent poor mRNA-protein correlation. It was shown that breast cancer outcome prediction was improved significantly by combining a four-marker immunohistochemical panel (AZGP1, PIP, S100A8, UBE2C) together with established clinicopathological features. Third, we showed that several putative markers previously identified by us may not only be useful for breast cancer prognostication, but may also be clinically relevant in oral squamous cell carcinoma, a cancer form bearing biological similarities to breast carcinoma. Lastly, we found that the 8p11-p12 genomic region is a hotspot for DNA amplification in breast cancer, where the WHSC1L1 gene may be one of several genes located in region with oncogenic potential and a substantial contributor to the aggressive breast cancer phenotype. Taken together, these findings further emphasize the importance of complementing established clinicopathological features with tumor-specific molecular markers to improve breast cancer risk assessment and develop more individualized treatment regimens.
Parts of work
I. Parris T.Z., Danielsson A., Nemes S., Kovács A., Delle U., Fallenius G., Möllerström E., Karlsson P., and Helou K. Clinical implications of gene dosage and gene expression patterns in diploid breast carcinoma. Clinical Cancer Research. 2010 Aug 1;16(15):3860-74. ::doi::10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-10-0889
 
II. Parris T.Z., Kovács A., Aziz L., Hajizadeh S., Nemes S., Semaan M., Forssell-Aronsson E., Karlsson P., and Helou K. Additive effect of the AZGP1, PIP, S100A8, and UBE2C molecular biomarkers improves outcome prediction in breast carcinoma. International Journal of Cancer. (2013). ::DOI::10.1002/ijc.28497
 
III. Parris T.Z.*, Aziz L.*, Kovács A., Hajizadeh S., Nemes S., Semaan M., Karlsson P., and Helou K. Clinical relevance of breast cancer-related genes as potential biomarkers for oral squamous cell carcinoma. Submitted.
 
IV. Parris T.Z., Kovács A., Hajizadeh S., Nemes S., Semaan M., Karlsson P., and Helou K. Functional significance of WHSC1L1 gene amplification and/or over-expression in breast carcinoma. Manuscript.
 
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (Medicine)
University
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Institute of Clincial Sciences. Department of Oncology
Disputation
Torsdagen den 16 januari 2014 kl. 9.00, Hörsal Arvid Carlsson, Medicinaregatan 3, Göteborg
Date of defence
2014-01-16
E-mail
toshima.parris@oncology.gu.se
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/34391
Collections
  • Doctoral Theses / Doktorsavhandlingar Institutionen för kliniska vetenskaper
  • Doctoral Theses from Sahlgrenska Academy
  • Doctoral Theses from University of Gothenburg / Doktorsavhandlingar från Göteborgs universitet
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Abstract (144.3Kb)
Thesis cover (178.5Kb)
Thesis frame (3.218Mb)
Date
2013-12-13
Author
Parris, Toshima Z.
Keywords
breast cancer
outcome prediction
molecular biomarker
8p11-p12 amplification
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-628-8841-1
Language
eng
Metadata
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