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Oestrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, pS2, ERD5, HSP27 and cathepsin D in invasive ductal breast carcinomas
Author(s) -
HURLIMANN J.,
GEBHARD S.,
GOMEZ F.
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
histopathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.626
H-Index - 124
eISSN - 1365-2559
pISSN - 0309-0167
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2559.1993.tb01196.x
Subject(s) - progesterone receptor , immunohistochemistry , receptor , cathepsin d , breast cancer , biology , hormone receptor , mammary gland , hormonal therapy , medicine , hormone , pathology , endocrinology , cancer research , cancer , estrogen receptor , biochemistry , enzyme
Hormonal receptors and markers for prognostic evaluation were detected immunohistochemically in 196 infiltrating ductal breast carcinomas. Immunohistochemical detection of progesterone and oestrogen receptor is a method giving results generally concordant with those of the binding assay. However, immunohistochemical detection seems better. It allows the detection of hormonal receptors on small carcinomas, it is not modified by the endogenous hormones, and it has a slightly better correlation with prognosis and with the response to hormone therapy. Immunohistochemical detection of progesterone receptor has a prognostic value, sorting a negative subgroup with a poor prognosis from the oestrogen receptor positive tumours. These results can be obtained without quantitative immunohistological methods. ERD5, pS2, HSP27 and cathepsin D are associated with oestrogen receptor positivity. pS2 and HSP27 are interesting markers. They characterize a subgroup of oestrogen receptor negative tumours with a good prognosis. Moreover, pS2 is a marker of response to hormone therapy. ERD5 and cathepsin D do not appear to be of value as markers of prognosis.