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Evaluation of changes in serum protein profiles during neoadjuvant chemotherapy in HER2‐positive breast cancer using an LC‐MALDI‐TOF/MS procedure
Author(s) -
Mazouni Chafika,
Baggerly Keith,
Hawke David,
Tsavachidis Spyros,
André Fabrice,
Buzdar Aman U.,
Martin PierreMarie,
Kobayashi Ryuji,
Pusztai Lajos
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
proteomics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.26
H-Index - 167
eISSN - 1615-9861
pISSN - 1615-9853
DOI - 10.1002/pmic.201000057
Subject(s) - hemopexin , chemotherapy , breast cancer , apolipoprotein b , medicine , cancer , haptoglobin , breast disease , blood proteins , oncology , gastroenterology , biology , cholesterol , heme , biochemistry , enzyme
Comparison of protein profiles of sera acquired before and after preoperative chemotherapy for breast cancer may reveal tumor markers that could be used to monitor tumor response. In this study, we analyzed pre‐ and post‐chemotherapy protein profiles of sera from 39 HER2‐postive breast cancer patients ( n =78 samples) who received 6 months of preoperative chemotherapy using LC‐MALDI‐TOF/MS technology. We detected qualitative and quantitative differences in pair‐wise comparison of pre‐ and post chemotherapy samples that were different in patients who achieved pathological complete response (pCR, n =21) compared with those with residual disease ( n =18). We identified 2329 and 3152 peaks as differentially expressed in the pre‐chemotherapy samples of the responders and non‐responders. Comparison of matching pre‐ and post‐chemotherapy samples identified 34 (32 decreased, two increased) and 304 peaks (157 decreased, 147 increased) that significantly changed ( p <0.01, false discovery rate ≤20%) after treatment in responders and non‐responders, respectively. The top 11 most significantly altered peptide peaks with the greatest change in intensity were positively identified. These corresponded to eight proteins including α‐2‐macroglobulin, complement 3, hemopexin, and serum amyloid P in the responder group and chains C and A of apolipoprotein A‐I, hemopexin precursor, complement C, and amyloid P component in the non‐responding groups. All proteins decreased after therapy, except chain C apolipoprotein A and hemopexin precursor that increased. These results suggest that changes in serum protein levels occur in response to chemotherapy and these changes partly appear different in patients who are highly sensitive to chemotherapy compared with those with lesser response.

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