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The prognostic ease and difficulty of invasive breast carcinoma

Breast carcinoma (BC) has been extensively profiled by high-throughput technologies for over a decade, and broadly speaking, these studies can be grouped into those that seek to identify patient subtypes (studies of heterogeneity) or those that seek to identify gene signatures with prognostic or pre...

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Published in:Cell reports (Cambridge) 2014-10, Vol.9 (1), p.129-142
Main Authors: Tofigh, Ali, Suderman, Matthew, Paquet, Eric R, Livingstone, Julie, Bertos, Nicholas, Saleh, Sadiq M, Zhao, Hong, Souleimanova, Margarita, Cory, Sean, Lesurf, Robert, Shahalizadeh, Solmaz, Garcia Lopez, Norberto, Riazalhosseini, Yasser, Omeroglu, Atilla, Ursini-Siegel, Josie, Park, Morag, Dumeaux, Vanessa, Hallett, Michael
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Breast carcinoma (BC) has been extensively profiled by high-throughput technologies for over a decade, and broadly speaking, these studies can be grouped into those that seek to identify patient subtypes (studies of heterogeneity) or those that seek to identify gene signatures with prognostic or predictive capacity. The sheer number of reported signatures has led to speculation that everything is prognostic in BC. Here, we show that this ubiquity is an apparition caused by a poor understanding of the interrelatedness between subtype and the molecular determinants of prognosis. Our approach constructively shows how to avoid confounding due to a patient's subtype, clinicopathological profile, or treatment profile. The approach identifies patients who are predicted to have good outcome at time of diagnosis by all available clinical and molecular markers but who experience a distant metastasis within 5 years. These inherently difficult patients (~7% of BC) are prioritized for investigations of intratumoral heterogeneity.
ISSN:2211-1247
2211-1247
DOI:10.1016/j.celrep.2014.08.073