Breast Cancer Research (Oct 2018)

Breast cancer survival predicted by TP53 mutation status differs markedly depending on treatment

  • Nathan A. Ungerleider,
  • Sonia G. Rao,
  • Ashkan Shahbandi,
  • Douglas Yee,
  • Tianhua Niu,
  • Wesley D. Frey,
  • James G. Jackson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13058-018-1044-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Background Previous studies on the role of TP53 mutation in breast cancer treatment response and survival are contradictory and inconclusive, limited by the use of different endpoints to determine clinical significance and by small sample sizes that prohibit stratification by treatment. Methods We utilized large datasets to examine overall survival according to TP53 mutation status in patients across multiple clinical features and treatments. Results Confirming other studies, we found that in all patients and in hormone therapy-treated patients, TP53 wild-type status conferred superior 5-year overall survival, but survival curves crossed at 10 or more years. In contrast, further stratification within the large dataset revealed that in patients receiving chemotherapy and no hormone therapy, wild-type TP53 status conferred remarkably poor overall survival. This previously unrecognized inferior survival is consistent with p53 inducing arrest/senescence instead of apoptosis. Addition of hormone therapy to chemotherapy improved survival notably in patients with TP53 wild-type tumors, but not mutant, suggesting hormone therapy could eradicate arrested/senescent cells. Testing this, we found that estrogen receptor-positive, TP53 wild-type breast cancer cells that were made senescent by doxorubicin treatment were sensitive to tamoxifen. Conclusions The poor survival of chemotherapy-treated patients with TP53 wild-type tumors may be improved by strategies to eliminate senescent cells, including the addition of hormone therapy when appropriate.

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