Clonal relatedness between lobular carcinoma in situ and synchronous malignant lesions Journal Article


Authors: Andrade, V. P.; Ostrovnaya, I.; Seshan, V. E.; Morrogh, M.; Giri, D.; Olvera, N.; De Brot, M.; Morrow, M.; Begg, C. B.; King, T. A.
Article Title: Clonal relatedness between lobular carcinoma in situ and synchronous malignant lesions
Abstract: Introduction: Lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS) has been accepted as a marker of risk for the development of invasive breast cancer, yet modern models of breast carcinogenesis include LCIS as a precursor of low-grade carcinomas. We provide evidence favoring a clonal origin for LCIS and synchronous estrogen receptor-positive malignant lesions of the ductal and lobular phenotype.Methods: Patients with prior LCIS undergoing mastectomy were identified preoperatively from 2003 to 2008. Specimens were widely sampled, and frozen blocks were screened for LCIS and co-existing malignant lesions, and were subject to microdissection. Samples from 65 patients were hybridized to the Affymetrix SNP 6.0 array platform. Cases with both an LCIS sample and an associated ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) or invasive tumor sample were evaluated for patterns of somatic copy number changes to assess evidence of clonal relatedness.Results: LCIS was identified in 44 of the cases, and among these a DCIS and/or invasive lesion was also identified in 21 cases. A total of 17 tumor pairs had adequate DNA/array data for analysis, including nine pairs of LCIS/invasive lobular cancer, four pairs of LCIS/DCIS, and four pairs of LCIS/invasive ductal cancer. Overall, seven pairs (41%) were judged to be clonally related; in five (29%) evidence suggested clonality but was equivocal, and five (29%) were considered independent. Clonal pairs were observed with all matched lesion types and low and high histological grades. We also show anecdotal evidence of clonality between a patient-matched triplet of LCIS, DCIS, and invasive ductal cancer.Conclusion: Our results support the role of LCIS as a precursor in the development of both high-grade and low-grade ductal and lobular cancers. © 2012 Andrade et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
Keywords: controlled study; human tissue; major clinical study; phenotype; mastectomy; cancer invasion; breast carcinoma; estrogen receptor; intraductal carcinoma; lobular carcinoma in situ; microdissection; copy number variation
Journal Title: Breast Cancer Research
Volume: 14
Issue: 4
ISSN: 1465-5411
Publisher: Biomed Central Ltd  
Date Published: 2012-07-09
Start Page: R103
Language: English
DOI: 10.1186/bcr3222
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 22776144
PMCID: PMC3680923
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 21 May 2013" - "CODEN: BCRRC" - "Source: Scopus"
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MSK Authors
  1. Venkatraman Ennapadam Seshan
    382 Seshan
  2. Monica Morrow
    772 Morrow
  3. Colin B Begg
    306 Begg
  4. Dilip D Giri
    184 Giri
  5. Tari King
    186 King
  6. Mary Morrogh
    33 Morrogh
  7. Narciso Olvera
    73 Olvera