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An association study of established breast cancer reproductive and lifestyle risk factors with tumour subtype defined by the prognostic 70-gene expression signature (MammaPrint<sup>®</sup>).

Makama M, Drukker CA, Rutgers EJT, Slaets L, Cardoso F, Rookus MA, Tryfonidis K, Van't Veer LJ, Schmidt MK

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  • Journal European journal of cancer (Oxford, England : 1990)

  • Published 16 Feb 2017

  • Volume 75

  • Pagination 5-13

  • DOI 10.1016/j.ejca.2016.12.024

Abstract

Reproductive and lifestyle factors influence both breast cancer risk and prognosis; this might be through breast cancer subtype. Subtypes defined by immunohistochemical hormone receptor markers and gene expression signatures are used to predict prognosis of breast cancer patients based on their tumour biology. We investigated the association between established breast cancer risk factors and the 70-gene prognostication signature in breast cancer patients.

signature (i.e. low-risk or high-risk tumours).

. In parous women, higher parity was associated with a lower risk (OR: 0.75, [95% confidence interval {CI}: 0.59-0.95] P = 0.018) and longer breastfeeding duration with a higher risk (OR: 1.03, [95% CI: 1.01-1.05] P = 0.005) of developing high-risk tumours; risk estimates were similar within oestrogen receptor-positive disease. After stratifying by menopausal status, the associations remained present in post-menopausal women.

Using prognostic gene expression profiles, we have indications that specific reproductive factors may be associated with prognostic tumour subtypes beyond hormone receptor status.