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Protein Linked With Poor
Prognosis in Early-Stage Breast Cancer
Reported January 30, 2008
WEDNESDAY, Jan. 30 (HealthDay News) -- High levels
of a protein called Ki-67 are associated with poor prognosis in women with
early-stage breast cancer, but this protein may not be useful in identifying
patients who would benefit from additional chemotherapy, an Italian study
suggests.
Some studies have suggested that breast tumors with a high percentage of
tumors cells expressing Ki-67 are more responsive to chemotherapy. This
study looked at whether Ki-67 levels predicted responsiveness to
chemotherapy in women who'd had surgery for breast cancer.
Researchers at the University of Milan in Italy assessed Ki-67 expression in
tumor samples from women in two randomized clinical trials comparing the use
of endocrine therapy alone to endocrine therapy after chemotherapy.
They found that Ki-67 expression didn't predict which women would benefit
from chemotherapy prior to endocrine therapy, but they did find that having
a high percentage of tumor cells expressing Ki-67 was associated with poorer
disease-free survival.
"In this study, Ki-67 [expression] was a prognostic factor, not a predictive
factor," the study authors wrote.
The findings were published in the Jan. 29 issue of the Journal of the
National Cancer Institute.
These results support the position of the American Society of Clinical
Oncology Tumor Markers Expert Panel that Ki-67 shouldn't be used to make
decisions about chemotherapy, Matthew Ellis, of Washington University in St.
Louis, wrote in an accompanying editorial.
"Biomarker studies with negative results can be just as important to publish
as those with positive results, because clinging to a long-favored but
incorrect hypothesis in the face of negative evidence impedes scientific and
clinical progress," Ellis wrote.
Source : HealthDay News
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