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RANK-ligand (RANKL) expression in young breast cancer patients and during pregnancy.

Authors :
Azim HA Jr
Peccatori FA
Brohée S
Branstetter D
Loi S
Viale G
Piccart M
Dougall WC
Pruneri G
Sotiriou C
Source :
Breast cancer research : BCR [Breast Cancer Res] 2015 Feb 21; Vol. 17, pp. 24. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Feb 21.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Introduction: RANKL is important in mammary gland development during pregnancy and mediates the initiation and progression of progesterone-induced breast cancer. No clinical data are available on the effect of pregnancy on RANK/RANKL expression in young breast cancer patients.<br />Methods: We used our previously published dataset of 65 pregnant and 130 matched young breast cancer patients with full clinical, pathological, and survival information. 85% of patients had available transcriptomic data as well. RANK/RANKL expression by immunohistochemistry using H-score on the primary tumor and adjacent normal tissue was performed. We examined the difference in expression of RANK/RANKL between pregnant and non-pregnant patients and their association with clinicopathological features and prognosis. We also evaluated genes and pathways associated with RANK/RANKL expression on primary tumors.<br />Results: RANKL but not RANK expression was more prevalent in the pregnant group, both on the tumor and adjacent normal tissue, independent of other clinicopathological factors (both P <0.001). 18.7% of pregnant and 5.3% of non-pregnant patients had tumors showing ≥10% of cells with 3+ RANKL expression. RANKL expression was significantly higher in progesterone receptor-positive, and luminal A-like tumors, with negative correlation with Ki-67 (all P <0.001). On the contrary, RANK expression was higher in triple negative tumors (P <0.001). Using false discovery rate <0.05, 151 and 1,207 genes were significantly correlated with tumor-expressed RANKL and RANK expression by immunohistochemistry, respectively. High RANKL expression within primary tumor was associated with pathways related to mammary gland development, bone resorption, T-cell proliferation and regulation of chemotaxis, while RANK expression was associated with immune response and proliferation pathways. At a median follow-up of 65 months, neither RANK nor RANKL expression within tumor was associated with disease free survival in pregnant or non-pregnant group.<br />Conclusions: Pregnancy increases RANKL expression both in normal breast and primary tumors. These results could guide further development of RANKL-targeted therapy.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1465-542X
Volume :
17
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Breast cancer research : BCR
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25849336
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13058-015-0538-7