Combinatorial biomarker expression in breast cancer
By: Rakha EA, Reis−Filho JS, Ellis IO.

Department of Histopathology, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, Nottingham City Hospital, Hucknall Road, Nottingham, NG5 1PB, UK, emadrakha@yahoo.com.
Breast Cancer Res Treat. 2010 Jan 28.

Abstract

Current clinical management of breast cancer relies on the availability of robust clinicopathological variables and few well−defined biological markers. Recent microarray−based expression profiling studies have emphasised the importance of the molecular portraits of breast cancer and the possibility of classifying breast cancer into biologically and molecularly distinct groups. Subsequent large scale immunohistochemical studies have demonstrated that the added value of studying the molecular biomarker expression in combination rather than individually. Oestrogen (ER) and progesterone (PR) receptors and HER2 are currently used in routine pathological assessment of breast cancer. Additional biomarkers such as proliferation markers and 'basal' markers are likely to be included in the future. A better understanding of the prognostic and predictive value of combinatorial assessment of biomarker expression could lead to improved breast cancer management in routine clinical practice and would add to our knowledge concerning the variation in behaviour and response to therapy. Here, we review the evidence on the value of assessing biomarker expression in breast cancer individually and in combination and its relation to the recent molecular classification of breast cancer.

PMID: 20107892 [PubMed − as supplied by publisher] Source: National Library of Medicine.






* Albert Einstein College of Medicine has been
awarded Acceditation with Commendation by
the ACCME

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