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Breast Cancer Research : BCR logoLink to Breast Cancer Research : BCR
. 2003 Oct 9;5(6):303–304. doi: 10.1186/bcr732

Microarray technology and its effect on breast cancer (re)classification and prediction of outcome

Fatima Cardoso 1,
PMCID: PMC314420  PMID: 14580246

Introduction

With screening mammography becoming more widely used throughout Europe, a growing proportion of women diagnosed with breast cancer present with earlier disease stages. Although these women can enjoy long-term survival, 20%–30% will relapse and die from their disease. There is, however, a great deal of controversy related to the optimal definition of a low/minimal versus a moderate/high risk of relapse for women with node negative breast cancer. Many oncologists rely on the guidelines issued by experts following consensus conferences [1]. Consequently, only 15% to 20% of patients are assigned to a "low/minimal risk" subset and this may result in many women with early breast cancer being over-treated – a phenomenon that not only exposes these women to unnecessary toxicity, but also increases the economic burden of this frequent disease on society.

Gene expression profiles

Microarray technology is fundamentally changing our understanding of cancer biology at the molecular level. Use of microarrays for genome-wide expression profiling provides a more refined molecular classification of human cancers and has reinforced the notion that breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease. This knowledge has great potential for a better selection of patients in need of adjuvant therapy as well as for tailored treatment approaches [2].

A landmark study in this area is the work of Sorlie and colleagues [3] that proposed a new classification of breast cancer clearly separating endocrine non-responsive from endocrine-responsive disease. Recently, Sorlie and coworkers have confirmed their results in an independent set of breast tumors, refining previously defined sub-types of breast tumors that could be distinguished by their distinct patterns of gene expression [4]. Other landmark studies [5,6], with potentially huge implications for clinical management of breast cancer, describe the work of the Amsterdam group. These investigators identified a 70-gene poor-prognosis signature that can accurately predict relapse-free survival in both node-negative and node-positive breast cancer. Interestingly, the number of low-risk patients who can be spared adjuvant chemotherapy appears to be markedly increased (about 30%) when the prognosis-genetic signature is used instead of the commonly used consensus guidelines. Although impressive and interesting, this work has some weakness, such as the retrospective nature of the study, the small sample size, and the fact that only young women were selected (all <52) all of whom were treated in one hospital. This makes extrapolations to other age groups and other regions difficult [7]. It also has to be born in mind, that microarray is a new and expensive technology that, although evolving rapidly, needs to be fully standardized in order to be reproducible across different laboratories.

Therefore, these interesting results needed to be duplicated in an independently run study and then validated in a large, independent, prospective trial, before being applicable in clinical practice [8]. This has recently been done by Sotiriou and colleagues [9] who analyzed RNAs from an independent set of 99 breast cancer patients with known clinical outcome. The results concur with those of the earlier studies, despite differences in patient populations, treatments used and technology platforms employed. This study found that the ER status of the tumor was, indeed, the most important discriminator of expression subtypes, confirming that ER biology plays a central role in breast carcinogenesis. Tumor grade was found to play a secondary role. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering analysis segregated these 99 tumors into two main clusters based on their basal (predominantly ER negative) and luminal (predominantly ER positive) characteristics; within each of these clusters smaller subgroups were identified, characterized by distinct gene expression signatures involving different oncogene-specific pathways. As in earlier studies, the molecular signature subgroups showed expected differences in survival, with a better outcome in the luminal group. In addition, the authors identified a group of 485 different probe elements statistically associated with survival (P < 0.05). Other clinical features, such as lymph node positivity, menopausal status, and tumor size, were not strongly reflected in the expression patterns obtained in this investigation. Thus, the evidence to date suggests that molecular profiling can substantially refine cancer prognosis, perhaps well beyond what is possible with other clinical indicators.

Another preliminary, but important, finding of this study is that molecular signatures might be generalized to populations other than those in which they were initially developed, and across multiple microarray platforms and technologies. Sotiriou and colleagues found substantial evidence that the 231 expressed genes reported as separating survival groups in the Van't Veer study [5] have prognostic relevance in a different, heterogeneous population of node positive and node negative patients treated with adjuvant therapy.

Conclusions and future directions

Given the high potential of gene expression profiling to change clinical practice, it is now important to validate this new prognostic tool in a large, independent and prospective trial. Such a study – the MINDACT trial – is already in an advanced stage of preparation and will be run through the Breast International Group network, coordinated by the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC), and funded by the European Commission under the Framework VI Programme. MINDACT will evaluate the role of the gene prognosis signature in the selection of good prognosis versus bad prognosis node negative breast cancer patients and aims to identify a subgroup of these patients that can be spared adjuvant chemotherapy.

Despite their importance, translating these outstanding advances in basic biological knowledge into clinical benefits in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer has been difficult and slow.

In the present era, where we are rapidly moving from empirical towards molecular oncology in cancer management, only large, well-conducted, biologically-based prospective trials will allow us to reach the needed conclusions and to shorten the lapse of time for the clinical application of new markers and techniques.

Competing interests

FC is part of the research team working on the MINDACT trial, which is funded by the European Commission.

Note

This article is based on papers highlighted by Faculty of 1000 http://www.facultyof1000.com/start.asp, a web-based literature awareness service. Faculty of 1000 evaluations available for articles cited in this report may be viewed at: http://breast-cancer-research.com/reports/bcr732.asp

References

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