Hereditary Cancer in Clinical Practice (Nov 2006)

<it>HER2 </it>Amplification Has no Prognostic Value in Sporadic and Hereditary Ovarian Tumours

  • Brożek Izabela,
  • Kardaś Iwona,
  • Ochman Karolina,
  • Dębniak Jarosław,
  • Stukan Maciej,
  • Ratajska Magdalena,
  • Morzuch Lucyna,
  • Emerich Janusz,
  • Limon Janusz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1897-4287-4-1-39
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
pp. 39 – 42

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Whereas HER2 amplification is a well-known phenomenon in breast tumours, its frequency and clinical importance in ovarian cancer have not been established. The aim of the study was to compare the frequency of HER2 amplification in hereditary (BRCA-positive) and sporadic (BRCA-negative) ovarian tumours and to estimate the association of this gene alteration on clinical outcome in ovarian cancer patients. We analysed HER2 amplification in 53 ovarian tumours: 20 from mutation carriers (18 in BRCA1 and 2 in BRCA2 gene) and 33 from non-carriers. Fluorescence in situ hybridization for HER2 was performed on 'touch' slides from frozen tumour samples or formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue. Our results indicate that high amplification (HER2: centromere ratio>5) is an infrequent phenomenon in ovarian tumours (6/53 cases). It occurs in both hereditary (4/20) and sporadic (2/33) tumours and no difference in the frequency of HER2 amplification exists between these groups. There is no significant difference in the clinical outcome of patients with HER2 amplified and non-amplified tumours (p = 0.3). Our results suggest a different biological role of HER2 amplification in ovarian and breast cancer.

Keywords