Article

Lab Invest 2001, 81:159–165

Clinical Relevance of T1-S, an Oncogene-Inducible, Secreted Glycoprotein of the Immunoglobulin Superfamily, in Node-Negative Breast Cancer

Dieter Prechtel1, Nadia Harbeck2, Ursula Berger3, Heinz Höfler1 and Ann Katrin Werenskiold1

  1. 1Institut für Allgemeine Pathologie und Pathologische Anatomie, Munich, Germany
  2. 2Frauenklinik, Munich, Germany
  3. 3Institut für Epidemiologie und Statistik der Technischen Universität München, Munich, Germany

Correspondence: Dr. Dieter Prechtel, Institut für Allgemeine Pathologie und Pathologische Anatomie, Klinikum rechts der Isar, Technische Universität München, Ismaningerstr.22, 81675 Munich, Germany. E-Mail: prechtel@lrz.tum.de

Received 31 August 2000.

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Abstract

Axillary lymph node-negative breast cancer patients have a low risk for disease recurrence, and the majority of these patients are cured by surgery alone. However, accurate identification of that 30% of node-negative patients who are at high-risk for relapse and who might therefore benefit from adjuvant systemic therapy has not been possible using traditional histomorphological and clinical prognostic factors alone. Identification of novel tumor-associated molecules may therefore provide a basis for a better understanding of and eventually for an interference with disease progression. We have recently reported on tumor-associated RNA up-regulation of the secreted, soluble T1-S receptor in node-negative breast cancer. In the present study we analyzed the tumor-associated level of the T1-S receptor using semiquantitative immunohistochemistry in a collective of 102 node-negative breast carcinomas to study its clinical relevance. A high T1-S immunoreactivity score indicating T1-S overexpression was observed in 58 of 102 (57%) cases. The T1-S score was independent of the tumor size, type, grade, steroid hormone receptor status, and the proliferation rate determined by monoclonal antibody against KI-67 protein (MIB1) immunohistochemistry. In univariate and multivariate analysis of disease-free survival, a high T1-S score (p = 0.003) and a low MIB1 score (p = 0.001) were the only parameters that were highly significantly associated with an improved disease-free survival period. We conclude that T1-S receptor overexpression is a novel and independent tumor biological factor that may be associated with reduced progression of lymph node-negative breast cancer.

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