Annexins in human breast cancer: Possible predictors of pathological response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy |
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Authors: | Suebwong Chuthapisith Beverley E. Bean Gerard Cowley Jennifer M. Eremin Srila Samphao Robert Layfield Ian D. Kerr Janice Wiseman Mohamed El-Sheemy Thiagarajan Sreenivasan Oleg Eremin |
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Affiliation: | 2. Department of Cardiology, Necmettin Erbakan University, Meram School of Medicine, Konya, Turkey;3. Department of Extracorporeal Hemocorrection, National Scientific Medical Research Center, Astana, Kazakhstan;4. Department of Nephrology, Necmettin Erbakan University, Meram School of Medicine, Konya, Turkey;5. Dialysis Department, Centro Nacional de Salud Renal—Essalud, Lima, Peru;11. Division of Renal Diseases and Hypertension, University of Colorado, Denver, CO, USA;12. Department of Medicine, Division of Nephrology, Istanbul Medeniyet University, Goztepe Training and Research Hospital, Istanbul, Turkey |
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Abstract: | Neoadjuvant chemotherapy is used in women who have large or locally advanced breast cancers. However, up to 70% of women who receive neoadjuvant chemotherapy fail to achieve a complete pathological response in their primary tumour (a surrogate marker of long-term survival). Five proteins, previously identified to be linked with chemoresistance in our in vitro experiments, were identified histochemically in pre-treatment core needle biopsies from 40 women with large or locally advanced breast cancers. Immunohistochemical staining with the five proteins showed no single protein to be a predictor of response to chemotherapy. However, pre-treatment breast cancer specimens that were annexin-A2 positive but annexin-A1 negative correlated with a poor pathological response (p = 0.04, Fisher’s exact test). The mechanisms by which annexins confer chemoresistance have not been identified, but may be due to inhibition of apoptosis. Annexin-A1 has been shown to enhance apoptosis, whilst annexin-A2, by contrast, inhibits apoptosis. |
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