Cancer Medicine (Aug 2023)

A study of clinical and molecular characteristics in bilateral primary breast cancer

  • Bin Li,
  • Weiqi Xu,
  • Jianing Cao,
  • Duancheng Guo,
  • Zhonghua Tao,
  • Juan Jin,
  • Xichun Hu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.6226
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 15
pp. 15881 – 15892

Abstract

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Abstract Background Bilateral primary breast cancer (BPBC) is a rare type of breast cancer. Studies on the clinicopathologic and molecular characteristics of BPBC in a metastatic context are very limited. Methods A total of 574 unselected metastatic breast cancer patients with clinical information were enrolled in our next‐generation sequencing (NGS) database. Patients with BPBC from our NGS database were regarded as the study cohort. In addition, 1467 patients with BPBC and 2874 patients with unilateral breast cancer (UBC) from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) public database were also analyzed to determine the characteristics of BPBC. Results Among the 574 patients enrolled in our NGS database, 20 (3.5%) patients had bilateral disease, comprising 15 (75%) patients with synchronous bilateral disease and 5 (25%) patients with metachronous bilateral disease. Eight patients had bilateral hormone receptor‐positive (HR+)/human epidermal growth factor receptor‐negative (HER2−) tumors, and three had unilateral HR+/HER2− tumors. More HR+/HER2− tumors and lobular components were found in BPBC patients than in UBC patients. The molecular subtype of the metastatic lesions in three patients was inconsistent with either side of the primary lesions, which suggested the importance of rebiopsy. Strong correlations in clinicopathologic features between the left and right tumors in BPBC were exhibited in the SEER database. In our NGS database, only one BPBC patient was found with a pathogenic germline mutation in BRCA2. The top mutated somatic genes in BPBC patients were similar to those in UBC patients, including TP53 (58.8% in BPBC and 60.6% in UBC) and PI3KCA (47.1% in BPBC and 35.9% in UBC). Conclusions Our study suggested that BPBC may tend to be lobular carcinoma and have the HR+/HER2− subtype. Although our study did not find specific germline and somatic mutations in BPBC, more research is needed for verification.

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