4.4 Article

Prognostic significance of heat shock protein 90AA1 (HSP90 alpha) in invasive breast cancer

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PATHOLOGY
Volume 75, Issue 4, Pages 263-269

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jclinpath-2020-207106

Keywords

breast neoplasms; pathology; molecular; breast diseases; lymph nodes

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Funding

  1. Saudi Arabia Ministry of Education, Northern Borders University (NBU)

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The aim of this study is to explore the clinical and prognostic importance of HSP90 alpha in breast cancer, and findings suggest that high expression of HSP90 alpha is significantly associated with poor prognostic characteristics in breast cancer. High HSP90 alpha protein expression is identified as an independent predictor of shorter breast cancer-specific survival.
Aims The mechanisms that drive breast cancer (BC) progression and poor outcome are not fully understood. The human heat shock protein 90 alpha family class A member 1 (HSP90 alpha) encoded by the HSP90 Alpha A1 gene has a vital role in cellular responses to stress and is implicated in the development and progression of many cancers. The current study aims to explore the clinical and prognostic importance of HSP90 alpha in BC. Methods The Molecular Taxonomy of Breast Cancer International Consortium (n=1980); The Cancer Genome Atlas (n=1097) and the Breast Cancer Gene-Expression Miner (Bc-GenExMiner) BC datasets (n=5056) were used to evaluate HSP90 Alpha A1 mRNA expression. HSP90 alpha protein expression was further assessed using immunohistochemistry in a large (n=911) well-characterised BC series. The association between mRNA and protein expressions with other clinicopathological parameters and outcome was analysed. Results High expression of HSP90 Alpha A1 both at the mRNA and protein levels was significantly associated with characteristics of BC poor prognosis, including high grade, lymphovascular invasion, poor Nottingham Prognostic Index and positive expression of p53 and PIK3CA. Outcome analysis revealed that high HSP90 alpha protein expression is an independent predictor of shorter BC-specific survival. Conclusion HSP90 alpha can be used as a potential prognostic marker in BC. Further mechanistic studies are warranted to determine the underlying molecular mechanisms mediated by HSP90 alpha in BC.

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