Abstract
We assessed the expression of vascular endothelial growth factors (VEGF-C and VEGF-D) in breast cancer cells and the density of lymph vessels and VEGF receptor-3 (VEGFR-3)-positive vessels in and around the tumor in invasive lobular breast cancer. We found significant correlation between peritumoral lymph vessel density and presence of lymph node metastases (P=.001) and the number of metastatic lymph nodes (P<.001). A significant correlation was detected between tumor cell VEGF-D expression and lymph node status (P=.001) and density of lymphatic vessel endothelial receptor (LYVE)-1-positive vessels (P=.035). VEGFR-3+/VEGF-D+ and VEGFR-3+/VEGF-C+ tumors had a significantly higher number of metastatic lymph nodes than tumors with other staining patterns (P<.001). Tumors positive for neither VEGF-D nor VEGFR-3 had a lower density of LYVE-1+ vessels than tumors with other staining patterns (P=.033). Our results indicate that peritumoral lymph vessel density is associated with lymph node metastases in invasive lobular breast cancer and that invasive lobular cancer producing VEGF-D, surrounded by VEGFR-3+ vessels, has a significantly higher peritumoral lymph vessel density and a higher number of metastatic lymph nodes.
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