HER-2 Gene Amplification Can Be Acquired as Breast Cancer Progresses

Amplification and overexpression of the HER-2 oncogene in breast cancer is felt to be stable over the course of disease and concordant between primary tumor and metastases. Therefore, patients with HER-2-negative primary tumors rarely will receive anti-Her-2 antibody (trastuzumab, Herceptin) therapy...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2004-06, Vol.101 (25), p.9393-9398
Hauptverfasser: Meng, Songdong, Tripathy, Debasish, Shete, Sanjay, Ashfaq, Raheela, Haley, Barbara, Perkins, Steve, Beitsch, Peter, Khan, Amanullah, Euhus, David, Osborne, Cynthia, Frenkel, Eugene, Hoover, Susan, Leitch, Marilyn, Clifford, Edward, Vitetta, Ellen, Morrison, Larry, Herlyn, Dorothee, Leon W. M. M. Terstappen, Fleming, Timothy, Fehm, Tanja, Tucker, Thomas, Lane, Nancy, Wang, Jianqiang, Uhr, Jonathan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Amplification and overexpression of the HER-2 oncogene in breast cancer is felt to be stable over the course of disease and concordant between primary tumor and metastases. Therefore, patients with HER-2-negative primary tumors rarely will receive anti-Her-2 antibody (trastuzumab, Herceptin) therapy. A very sensitive blood test was used to capture circulating tumor cells (CTCs) and evaluate their HER-2 gene status by fluorescence in situ hybridization. The HER-2 status of the primary tumor and corresponding CTCs in 31 patients showed 97% agreement, with no false positives. In 10 patients with HER-2-positive tumors, the HER-2/chromosome enumerator probe 17 ratio in each tumor was about twice that of the corresponding CTCs (mean 6.64 ± 2.72 vs. 2.8 ± 0.6). Hence, the ratio of the CTCs is a reliable surrogate marker for the expected high ratio in the primary tumor. Her-2 protein expression of 10 CTCs was sufficient to make a definitive diagnosis of the HER-2 gene status of the whole population of CTCs in 19 patients with recurrent breast cancer. Nine of 24 breast cancer patients whose primary tumor was HER-2-negative each acquired HER-2 gene amplification in their CTCs during cancer progression, i.e., 37.5% (95% confidence interval of 18.8-59.4%). Four of the 9 patients were treated with Herceptin-containing therapy. One had a complete response and 2 had a partial response.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0402993101