4.7 Article

Cyclin A as a marker for prognosis and chemotherapy response in advanced breast cancer

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 93, Issue 5, Pages 515-519

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6602735

Keywords

cyclin A; advanced breast cancer; prognosis; chemotherapy response; proliferation

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We wanted to study cyclin A as a marker for prognosis and chemotherapy response. A total of 283 women with metastatic breast cancer were initially enrolled in a randomised multicentre trial comparing docetaxel to sequential methotrexate-fluorouracil (MF) in advanced breast cancer after anthracycline failure. Paraffin-embedded blocks of the primary tumour were available for 96 patients (34%). The proportion of cells expressing cyclin A was determined by immunohistochemistry using a mouse monoclonal antibody to human cyclin A. Response evaluation was performed according to WHO recommendations. The median cyclin A positivity of tumour cells was 14.5% ( range 1.2 - 45.0). Cyclin A correlated statistically significantly to all other tested proliferation markers ( mitotic count, histological grade and Ki-67). A high cyclin A correlated significantly to a shorter time to first relapse, risk ratio (RR) 1.94 (95% CI 1.24 - 3.03) and survival from diagnosis, RR 2.49 ( 95% CI 1.45 - 4.29), cutoff point for high/low proliferation group 10.5%. Cyclin A did not correlate to chemotherapy response or survival after anthracycline, docetaxel or MF therapy. Of all tumour biological factors tested ( mitotic count, histological grade and Ki-67), cyclin A seemed to have the strongest prognostic value. Cyclin A is a good marker for tumour proliferation and prognosis in breast cancer. In the present study, cyclin A did not predict chemotherapy response.

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