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Originally published as Ann Surg Oncol Early Release 10.1245/ASO.2004.03.024 on August 16, 2004

Annals of Surgical Oncology 11:861-868 (2004)
© 2004 Society of Surgical Oncology
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ORIGINAL ARTICLES

Outer Breast Quadrants Demonstrate Increased Levels of Genomic Instability

Darrell L. Ellsworth, PhD, Rachel E. Ellsworth, PhD, Brad Love, PhD, Brenda Deyarmin, Susan M. Lubert, Vimal Mittal, MD, Jeffrey A. Hooke, MD and Craig D. Shriver, MD

From the Clinical Breast Care Project, Windber Research Institute (DLE, REE, BD, SML, VM), Windber, Pennsylvania; Invitrogen Bioinformatics (BL), Frederick, Maryland; and General Surgery Service, Walter Reed Army Medical Center (JAH, CDS), Washington, DC.

Correspondence: Address correspondence and reprint requests to: Darrell L. Ellsworth, PhD, Windber Research Institute, 600 Somerset Avenue, Windber, PA 15963; Fax: 814-467-6334; E-mail: d.ellsworth{at}wriwindber.org

Background: Theory holds that the upper outer quadrant of the breast develops more malignancies because of increased tissue volume. This study evaluated genomic patterns of loss of heterozygosity (LOH) and allelic imbalance (AI) in non-neoplastic tissues from quadrants of diseased breasts following mastectomy to characterize relationships between genomic instability and the propensity for tumor development.

Methods: Tissues from breast quadrants were collected from 21 patients with various stages of breast carcinoma. DNA was isolated from non-neoplastic tissues using standard methods and 26 chromosomal regions commonly deleted in breast cancer were examined to assess genomic instability.

Results: Genomic instability was observed in breast quadrants from patients with ductal carcinomas in situ and advanced carcinomas. Levels of instability by quadrant were not predictive of primary tumor location (P = .363), but outer quadrants demonstrated significantly higher levels of genomic instability than did inner quadrants (P = .017). Marker D8S511 on chromosome 8p22–21.3, one of the most frequently altered chromosomal regions in breast cancer, showed a significantly higher level of instability (P = .039) in outer compared with inner quadrants.

Conclusions: Non-neoplastic breast tissues often harbor genetic changes that can be important to understanding the local breast environment within which cancer develops. Greater genomic instability in outer quadrants can partially explain the propensity for breast cancers to develop there, rather than simple volume-related concepts. Patterns of field cancerization in the breast appear to be complex and are not a simple function of distance from a developing tumor.

Key Words: Loss of heterozygosity • Allelic imbalance • Breast cancer • Field cancerization • Quadrants • Metastasis




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