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Resumen de Cáncer de mama metastásico: Caracterización de una cohorte según subtipos

César Sánchez R, Francisco Acevedo C, Militza Petric G, Héctor Galindo A, Francisco Domínguez C, Augusto León R, Dravna Razmilic, Carolina Ceballos, Fernando Espinoza, M. Elena Navarro O, David Oddo, Mauricio Camus A.

  • Background: The prognosis of breast cancer (BC) is in part determined by the stage at diagnosis and its pathological characteristics. Aim: To evaluate the association between survival of women with metastatic breast cancer and pathological features of the tumor. Patients and Methods: We obtained clinical and pathological data from patients diagnosed with a metastatic BC between 1999 and 2013. The expression of estrogen (ER) and progesterone (PR) receptors and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) was determined by immunohistochemistry. Clinicopathological subtypes were defined as: Luminal A: ER or PR positive, HER2 negative, histological grade (HG) 1 or 2; Luminal B: ER or PR positive, HER2 negative or positive or HG 3; triple negative (TN): ER, PR and HER2 negative, independent of the HG, positive HER2: ER, PR negative and HER2 positive, independent of HG. We analyzed survival based on these subtypes. Results: We identified 54 patients aged 24 to 85 years, with metastatic BC at diagnosis. Seventy five percent had luminal tumors; 19.6% HER2 positive and 7.8% were TN. In 61% of evaluable tumors, HG was classified as 3. The frequency of HER2 positive and high HG tumors was greater in these patients with metastatic BC than in a non-metastatic local BC cohort. Survival was higher among patients with Luminal tumors than in women with non-Luminal cancer (56.4 and 11.4 months, respectively, p = 0.04). Conclusions: Patients with metastatic BC at diagnosis often had HER2 positive tumors and high HG. As in other studies, ER positive tumors had a better survival.


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