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Hormone receptor and c-ERBB2 status in distant metastatic and locally recurrent breast cancer. Pathologic correlations and clinical significance.

Idirisinghe PK,Thike AA,Cheok PY,Tse GM,Lui PC,Fook-Chong S,Wong NS,Tan PH

Abstract

Estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), and c-ERBB2 (HER2/neu) are therapeutically and prognostically important markers in the management of breast carcinoma. They are not always analyzed in distant metastatic and locally recurrent breast cancers. We compared immunohistochemical expression in a series of primary breast carcinomas with their distant metastases (n = 72) and local recurrences (n = 45) and analyzed the impact of any changes on survival. Discordance rates between primary and metastatic and between primary and locally recurrent lesions, respectively, were 18% (13/72) and 13% (6/45) for ER, 42% (30/72) and 33% (15/45) for PR, and 7% (5/72) and 2% (1/45) for c-ERBB2. There was statistically significant discordance between primary and metastatic PR status (P = .017; kappa = 0.201). Among locally recurrent tumors, 15 (33%) of 45 revealed discordance for PR (P = .006; kappa = 0.366). We observed a trend for shorter survival among women with ER- metastatic and locally recurrent tumors regardless of the primary tumor ER status. Our findings suggest a benefit for routine evaluation of ER, PR, and c-ERBB2 status in distant metastatic and locally recurrent breast cancer for therapeutic and prognostic purposes.

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