Gene-expression profiles to predict distant metastasis of lymph-node-negative primary breast cancer

  • Yixin Wang
  • , Jan G M Klijn
  • , Yi Zhang
  • , Anieta M Sieuwerts
  • , Maxime P Look
  • , Fei Yang
  • , Dmitri Talantov
  • , Mieke Timmermans
  • , Marion E Meijer-van Gelder
  • , Jack Yu
  • , Tim Jatkoe
  • , Els M.J.J. Berns
  • , David Atkins
  • , John A Foekens*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

2443 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

BACKGROUND: 

Genome-wide measures of gene expression can identify patterns of gene activity that subclassify tumours and might provide a better means than is currently available for individual risk assessment in patients with lymph-node-negative breast cancer.

METHODS: 

We analysed, with Affymetrix Human U133a GeneChips, the expression of 22000 transcripts from total RNA of frozen tumour samples from 286 lymph-node-negative patients who had not received adjuvant systemic treatment.

FINDINGS: 

In a training set of 115 tumours, we identified a 76-gene signature consisting of 60 genes for patients positive for oestrogen receptors (ER) and 16 genes for ER-negative patients. This signature showed 93% sensitivity and 48% specificity in a subsequent independent testing set of 171 lymph-node-negative patients. The gene profile was highly informative in identifying patients who developed distant metastases within 5 years (hazard ratio 5.67 [95% CI 2.59-12.4]), even when corrected for traditional prognostic factors in multivariate analysis (5.55 [2.46-12.5]). The 76-gene profile also represented a strong prognostic factor for the development of metastasis in the subgroups of 84 premenopausal patients (9.60 [2.28-40.5]), 87 postmenopausal patients (4.04 [1.57-10.4]), and 79 patients with tumours of 10-20 mm (14.1 [3.34-59.2]), a group of patients for whom prediction of prognosis is especially difficult.

INTERPRETATION: 

The identified signature provides a powerful tool for identification of patients at high risk of distant recurrence. The ability to identify patients who have a favourable prognosis could, after independent confirmation, allow clinicians to avoid adjuvant systemic therapy or to choose less aggressive therapeutic options.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)671-679
Number of pages9
JournalLancet (UK)
Volume365
Issue number9460
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 19 Feb 2005

Research programs

  • EMC MM-03-86-01

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