4.7 Article

Clinical relevance of cancer stem cells in bone marrow of early breast cancer patients

Journal

ANNALS OF ONCOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 10, Pages 2515-2521

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1093/annonc/mdt223

Keywords

bone marrow; breast cancer; cancer stem cells; CD24; CD44; circulating tumor cells

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Funding

  1. Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program [DAMD 17-03-01-0669]
  2. Society of Surgical Oncology Clinical Investigator Award
  3. MD Anderson Institute for Personalized Cancer Therapy
  4. State of Texas Rare and Aggressive Breast Cancer Research program
  5. Morgan Welch Inflammatory Breast Cancer Research Program and Clinic
  6. National Cancer Institute [CA138239-02]
  7. Department of Defense Predoctoral Student Trainee Fellowship
  8. National Cancer Institute through the MD Anderson Cancer Center Support Grant [CA016672]

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Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are epithelial tumor cells that express CD44(+)CD24(-/lo). CSCs can be further divided into those that have aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) activity (Aldefluor(+)) and those that do not. We hypothesized that if CSCs are responsible for tumor dissemination, their presence in bone marrow (BM) would be prognostic in early stages of breast cancer (EBC) patients. BM aspirates were collected at the time of surgery from 108 patients with EBC. BM was analyzed for CSCs and ALDH activity by flow cytometry. Overall survival and disease-free survival (DFS) were calculated from the date of diagnosis and analyzed with Kaplan-Meier survival plots. Cox multivariate proportional hazards model was also carried out. Patients with CSCs in BM had a hazard ratio (HR) of 8.8 for DFS (P = 0.002); patients with Aldefluor(+) CSCs had a HR of 5.9 (P = 0.052) for DFS. All deceased patients (n = 7) had CSCs in BM. In multivariate analysis, the presence of CSCs in BM was a prognostic factor of DFS (HR = 15.8, P = 0.017). The presence of BM metastasis is correlated with CSCs and these CSCs irrespective of ALDH activity are an independent adverse prognostic factor in EBC patients.

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